These countries have never reported a coronavirus case

Across the globe, there are only 10 United Nations member countries with no recorded COVID-19 cases

These islands did what no other country managed to: Keep the coronavirus wholly out of their borders.

Across the globe, there are only 10 United Nations member countries with no recorded COVID-19 cases. All Pacific Ocean islands, they are the Republic of Palau, Micronesia, the Republic of Nauru (a microstate of Micronesia), the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Republic of Kiribati, the Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, the Independent State of Samoa, the Republic of Vanuatu and the Kingdom of Tonga, the BBC reported.

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While the rest of the world fights the coronavirus, these assorted isles and archipelagos boast the honor of successfully managing to keep the novel virus at bay. But in order to do that, they’ve had to aggressively close their borders, and in the process, restrict tourism dollars vital to their economies and imperiling business owners’ livelihoods.

Still, even those looking at fiscal despair feel their government made the right move in temporarily sacrificing the economy in the name of keeping out COVID-19.

“I think they did a good job,” Brian Lee, co-owner of a nearly 40-year-old hotel on Palau, told the BBC of the government’s decision to functionally close, and keep closed, the republic’s borders since March. Still, if Palau’s borders do not soon open, even with the nation’s public financial support, he may have to shutter his business.

“I can stay for another half-a-year,” said Lee, who usually enjoys a 70 to 80% occupancy rate but now finds himself struggling to keep his 20-some-person staff busy. “Then I may have to close.”

Across the globe, there are only 10 United Nations member countries with no recorded COVID-19 cases. (iStock)

The Marshall Islands anticipates losing over 700 jobs as a result of the pandemic, many in hospitality as well as the fishing industry, where strict quarantine restrictions have contributed to what some reports estimate as a 50% depletion in exports.

There remains a general consensus among experts, though, that prioritizing residents’ health over their wealth was the right move.

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“Even if they kept their borders open, their major tourism markets of Australia and New Zealand wouldn’t be open, as they’ve locked down their own borders,” Jonathan Pryke, director of the Pacific islands program at an independent international policy think tank told the BBC. “If the islands had chosen to prioritize their economy, they would have the worst of both worlds — a health crisis and an economic crisis,” Pryke added.

While it’ll take years for society to decide what the best policies for handling the coronavirus were, Pryke feels confidently that “looking back, no one’s going to doubt that locking down was the right move by these Pacific nations.”

This article originally appeared on the New York Post. 

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