The Sunday Guardian

WORLD CLOSES BORDERS, RESTRICTS TRAVEL TO CONTAIN VIRUS SPREAD

Countries have shuttered museums, tourist attraction­s and sporting events to minimise the risk.

- REUTERS WELLINGTON/ CAIRO/ MELBOURNE

Countries around the world on Saturday continued to close borders, impose strict entry and quarantine requiremen­ts and restrict large gatherings in efforts to contain the spread of the new coronaviru­s. Apple Inc (AAPL.O) said it will close all its retail stores worldwide, outside Greater China, until March 27. Apple reopened all 42 of its branded stores in China on Friday as the spread of the virus on mainland China slowed dramatical­ly.

Countries have shuttered museums, tourist attraction­s and sporting events to minimize the risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on, with more than 138,000 people worldwide infected and more than 5,000 dead.

Colombia said it will close its borders with Venezuela and stop visitors who have been in Europe or Asia, while a US ban on entry for most people from continenta­l Europe was due to start midnight Friday. The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) says Europe has become the pandemic’s current epicenter after reporting more cases and deaths than the rest of world combined, apart from China where the coronaviru­s originated last December. Saudi Arabia will suspend all internatio­nal flights for two weeks, starting Sunday, state news agency SPA said, Taiwan will require travelers from mainland Europe,

Britain and Ireland to self-isolate for 14 days, while New Zealand implemente­d a similar measure for all those entering the country. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern also called on cruise ships, a major source of infections in some countries, not to come to New Zealand until June 30. “Alongside Israel, and a small number of Pacific Islands who have effectivel­y closed their border, this decision will mean New Zealand will have the widest ranging and toughest border restrictio­ns of any country in the world,” she said. The country has just six confirmed cases and has had no deaths, but Ardern said that number inevitably would rise.

“That is why ultimately, we must go hard and we must go early,” she told reporters.

Chilean President Sebastian Pinera announced a ban on public events with more than 500 people on Friday, joining countries such as Australia where the ban will come into force on Monday.

Britain will introduce emergency laws next week to ban mass gatherings, said a government source, an escalation of its crisis plan which critics had said was too relaxed. The Philippine­s capital Manila, home to 12 million people, announced nighttime curfews on Saturday and urged shopping malls to close for one month.

“To limit the spread of the virus, we need to limit the movement of people. We are slowing down the movement of people in Metro Manila,” said Jose Arturo Garcia, general manager of the Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority. In a bid to limit the economic damage from a pandemic that has infected the US House of Representa­tives passed an aid package that would provide free testing and paid sick leave.

The US military said it will halt most domestic travel, extending earlier restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travel for its more than a million active-duty troops around the world. Travel bans have hammered airlines and travel companies worldwide, while financial markets have been hit by panic selling this week. The impact of the coronaviru­s on everyday life is also deepening. The Czech government will shut most shops and restaurant­s from early Saturday, with exceptions including food stores, pharmacies and gas stations.

In Paris, the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre museum and the Moulin Rouge cabaret closed their doors. The Smithsonia­n museums in Washington were preparing to do so on Saturday and Broadway theaters in New York went dark.

 ?? Police officers stand inside a metro train, following an outbreak of coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) in Warsaw, Poland on Saturday. REUTERS ??
Police officers stand inside a metro train, following an outbreak of coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) in Warsaw, Poland on Saturday. REUTERS
 ?? People wearing face masks amid concerns about the spread of coronaviru­s outbreak are pictured at the premises of Boudhanath Stupa in Kathmandu, Nepal on Saturday. REUTERS ??
People wearing face masks amid concerns about the spread of coronaviru­s outbreak are pictured at the premises of Boudhanath Stupa in Kathmandu, Nepal on Saturday. REUTERS

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