Updated On: 05 February, 2022 08:50 AM IST | Bangkok | Agencies
All have limited health care resources, and there are concerns that the remoteness that once protected them may now make helping them difficult

In this photo provided by the Australian Defence Force, debris from damaged buildings and trees is strewn around on Atata Island in Tonga, on January 28, after the undersea quake and tsunami. Pic/AP
For more than two years, the isolation of the Pacific archipelago nation of Tonga helped keep COVID-19 at bay.
But last month’s volcanic eruption and tsunami brought outside deliveries of desperately needed fresh water and medicine — and the virus. Now the country is in an open-ended lockdown, which residents hope will help contain the small outbreak and will not last too long.