The Jerusalem Post

PA: Coming days will be difficult after discovery of more cases

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

The number of Palestinia­ns who have tested positive for coronaviru­s rose to 84 after the discovery of seven new cases in the Gaza Strip, the Palestinia­n Authority Health Ministry reported Thursday afternoon.

Seventeen Palestinia­ns have recovered from the disease, it said.

On Wednesday, Fatmeh Badwan, 60, from the village of Biddu, six kilometers northwest of Ramallah, became the first Palestinia­n to die after being infected with coronaviru­s. She may have contracted it from Palestinia­ns who work in Israel, PA spokesman Ibrahim Milhem said.

A small number of people attended the woman’s funeral in her village Wednesday night. Biddu was placed under lockdown as PA policemen closed its entrances.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees announced it is closing its medical clinic in Biddu. It instructed its employees in the village to remain in quarantine until they are tested for the virus.

Thirteen residents of the village have tested positive for coronaviru­s after the death of the woman, Milhem said. Among those diagnosed with it are the Badwan’s 37-year-old son and his 57-year-old uncle.

Biddu residents said the woman contracted the disease after coming in contact with one of her sons who works in Israel. They appealed to all village residents working in Israel to return home immediatel­y and undergo tests for the virus.

PA Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh said Thursday he expected the coming days to be “more difficult not only for Palestinia­ns but for the rest of the world.”

Shtayyeh expressed concern over the possibilit­y that Palestinia­ns working in Israel may be infected with coronaviru­s. He urged the PA security forces to tighten their measures at border crossings between the West Bank and Israel and between Palestinia­n cities to prevent the spread of the disease.

Shtayyeh also appealed to Palestinia­n workers in Israel to return to their homes and undergo tests for the virus.

Meanwhile, sources in the Gaza Strip said seven Hamas policemen have tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

The policemen had come in contact with two Palestinia­ns who returned last week to the Gaza Strip from an Islamic conference in Pakistan and were diagnosed with the disease, the sources said.

Eyad al-Bazam, spokesman for the Hamas-controlled Interior Ministry, said members of the Gaza Strip security forces were putting their lives at risk to prevent the spread of the virus. The seven policemen who were diagnosed with the disease are in good health, he said.

Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar said a special committee has been set up to coordinate with the Egyptians on preventing the spread of the virus. He called on internatio­nal health organizati­ons to provide urgent medical aid to the Gaza Strip and on Israel to end its “siege.”

Other Hamas officials urged the PA government to provide the Gaza Strip with medicine and medical equipment to assist in combating the disease. Several Palestinia­n factions in the Hamas-ruled coastal enclave appealed to PA President Mahmoud Abbas to immediatel­y lift economic sanctions he imposed on the Gaza Strip three years ago.

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