The Fiji Times

Wedding halls open with laced masks

- ■ REUTERS

DIYARBAKIR, Turkey - Brideto-be Merve Kacar adjusted her gown, placed a crown on her head and added the finishing touch of a lace-trimmed white face mask as she prepared for her wedding in southeast Turkey after a three-month delay.

The country allowed wedding halls, along with theatres and internet cafes, to open again from Wednesday as it wound down some of its last major coronaviru­s curbs in a bid to return life to normal and revive the economy.

But some restrictio­ns remained.

“There is no dancing without touching our families, and no gold ceremony,” Ms Kacar, said, referring to the custom where guests give coins to the couple.

“We are not happy about it but it’s more appropriat­e this way,” the 24-year-old told Reuters at her dress rehearsal in Diyarbakir, the southeast’s main city.

At a separate wedding in the city on Wednesday, the groom Serdal Aman felt more sanguine. “We are feeling lucky in all this unluckines­s. We were really lucky to get an appointmen­t for the first day,” he said.

At the start of June, Turkey opened restaurant­s and cafes, and lifted weekend stay-home orders and inter-city travel bans. A subsequent doubling of daily coronaviru­s cases prompted President Tayyip Erdogan to warn the country had lost some ground in its battle with coronaviru­s.

Turkey has recorded more than 200,000 COVID-19 cases and 5150 deaths, with new daily cases running around 1300.

As Turks poured out into streets, parks, malls and vacation spots last month, Ankara made face masks compulsory in major cities. More measures could come even as officials have said there is no plan to slow momentum in the economy, which emerged in June from a near standstill since mid-March.

Some 1150 wedding halls in Istanbul were cleaned and prepared for the reopening, stateowned Anadolu news agency reported.

New rules mean guests’ temperatur­es are taken and sanitisers are used upon arrival. Tables are separated and everyone — including the bride and groom — must wear masks.

Biricik Kiziltas, a bridal gown designer, said she had responded by making a new line of masks with lace and other decorative touches.

“Brides are already feeling sad, and they have no excitement, so we tried to make something to cheer them up,” she said.

 ?? Picture: AP ?? Myanmar Fire Service Department rescue workers and members of the public carry bodies of victims of a landslide at a jade mining area in Hpakant, Kachine state, northern Myanmar on Thursday.
Picture: AP Myanmar Fire Service Department rescue workers and members of the public carry bodies of victims of a landslide at a jade mining area in Hpakant, Kachine state, northern Myanmar on Thursday.
 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? Bride Pelsin Akkoyun and groom Nizamettin Bingol wear protective face masks and walk with their relatives and friends following a civil wedding ceremony, amid the spread of the coronaviru­s in Diyarbakir, Turkey on Thursday.
Picture: REUTERS Bride Pelsin Akkoyun and groom Nizamettin Bingol wear protective face masks and walk with their relatives and friends following a civil wedding ceremony, amid the spread of the coronaviru­s in Diyarbakir, Turkey on Thursday.

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