Gulf Today

Thai PM fined for not wearing face mask

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha was fined 6,000 baht ($190) on Monday for breaching rules aimed at containing the coronaviru­s by not wearing a face mask, the governor of Bangkok said.

“I informed the prime minister this was a violation of rules,” Bangkok Governor Aswin Kwanmuang wrote on his official Facebook page. The move came ater a photograph of Prayuth appeared on his Facebook page showing him not wearing a mask in a meeting. The photograph was later removed.

The prime minister made an inquiry to city hall about the restrictio­ns, which specify that masks should be worn at all times outside residences, prompting his fine, said Aswin.

The capital, Bangkok, which has the largest number of cases, is closing more than 30 types of businesses and services, including cinemas, parks, zoos, bars, pools and massage parlors. Gatherings of more than 20 people are banned. Shopping malls and department stores may continue operating, but with abbreviate­d hours.

Despite rapidly rising numbers, there currently are no nationwide lockdowns, curfews or travel bans, though individual provinces have been allowed to issue their own restrictio­ns, including mandatory quarantine­s for visitors from other provinces. Forty-eight of the 76 provinces have imposed fines for not wearing face masks.

Thai health authoritie­s on Monday announced 2.048 new infections and eight new deaths, the fourth day in a row with more than 2,000 new cases. That brought the country’s totals to 57,508 cases and 148 fatalities.

The high number of cases has created shortages of hospital beds and intensive care units. It has also underlined the government’s failure to obtain adequate supplies of vaccines. Less than 2% of Thailand’s 69 million people have been vaccinated.

Thailand has struggled to cope with the new outbreak, which originated in March in nightspots in and around Bangkok, as Prayuth Chan-ocha’s government has been reluctant to impose harsh restrictio­ns that would further hurt businesses already batered by the pandemic.

Apisamai Srirangsan, a spokeswoma­n for the national Centre for COVID-19 Situation Administra­tion, said the government on Thursday will discuss whether to impose additional measures in some areas, including the country’s two major cities, Bangkok and Chiang Mai.

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A shopper walks past a mouse statue in a shopping mall in Bangkok on Monday.
Agence France-presse ↑ A shopper walks past a mouse statue in a shopping mall in Bangkok on Monday.

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