The Jerusalem Post

Gulf coronaviru­s infections surpass 800,000, death toll almost reaches 7,000

-

DUBAI ( Reuters) – The number of recorded novel coronaviru­s cases in the six Gulf Arab states has doubled in three months to more than 800,000, according to a Reuters tally.

All countries have lifted internal curfews and lockdowns, but restrictio­ns on gatherings and foreign travel remain, and social- distancing measures are being enforced.

Since reaching 100,000 cases in mid- May, the time it takes for infections to double has widened from half a month, to one month to three months. A longer doubling rate indicates slower growth in the infection rate.

As of Tuesday, the tally in the energy- producing region stood at 800,651 infections, with 6,805 deaths.

The United Arab Emirates, Oman and Bahrain have seen daily case numbers rise

again in September.

Ten days ago, the UAE recorded 1,007 infections, its highest daily number since the start of the pandemic. Authoritie­s said people were not adhering to

social- distancing measures.

The Dubai business hub reopened to foreign visitors in July, but airports in the rest of the UAE remain closed to visitors.

Saudi Arabia, which has the highest regional count, with more than 330,000 infections and 4,500 deaths, has seen a downward trend in daily case numbers since early July. On Monday, 492 new cases were reported, compared with a midJune peak of 4,919.

Last week, the kingdom partially lifted a suspension of internatio­nal flights to allow “exceptiona­l categories” of citizens and residents to travel. It will scrap all air, land and sea travel restrictio­ns for citizens on January 1, 2021.

Kuwait’s daily case numbers have fluctuated between 900 and 400 since early May. It began a partial resumption of commercial flights on August 1 while banning those from several countries. On Tuesday, Kuwait’s tally surpassed 100,000 cases, with 588 deaths.

 ?? ( Christophe­r Pike/ Reuters) ?? A MAN has his temperatur­e taken outside a store in Dubai in April.
( Christophe­r Pike/ Reuters) A MAN has his temperatur­e taken outside a store in Dubai in April.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel