The New Zealand Herald

Lebanon to reinstate total lockdown

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Lebanese people rushed to food stores to stock up on vegetables and basic items, hours before the government reinstated a nationwide lockdown, following a spike in reported coronaviru­s cases.

The government called on the public to stay home for four days from yesterday, reversing measures that were gradually implemente­d last month to phase out restrictio­ns imposed since mid-March.

The new shutdown is a rare reversal and comes as many countries have started easing restrictio­ns despite grave concerns of a setback, as they seek to balance economic and health care needs.

Many places are seeing an increase in infections after loosening lockdown restrictio­ns. They include Wuhan, the Chinese city where the coronaviru­s pandemic first broke out, South Korea and Iraq, which yesterday recorded one of the highest single day number of infections since the outbreak.

Restaurant­s in Lebanon will close down after they partially opened 10 days ago. The country’s top Sunni Muslim cleric announced that communal Friday prayers in mosques would also be halted, only a week after they were allowed to resume at limited capacity.

The public health crisis comes at a particular­ly turbulent period for Lebanon. The country is facing an unpreceden­ted economic and financial crisis, putting pressure on a population that is seeing its savings erode.

The currency, pegged at a fixed rate to the dollar since 1997, has lost 60 per cent of its value in a few weeks.

Unemployme­nt had been rising even before the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns as economic growth and investment dropped.

Officials say 45 per cent of the population now lives in poverty. The government has asked the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund for financial assistance, and formal negotiatio­ns over the rescue plan led by the Lebanese Finance Minister began with the IMF yesterday.

Lebanon began a phased-out plan to relax a national lockdown late last month, allowing small businesses to reopen, and shortened a night-time curfew. But after a few days of singledigi­t cases detected, there has been a spike in reported infections since last week, including among citizens returning home during repatriati­on programmes who did not observe quarantine measures.

Lebanon, a country of 5 million, has so far been able to contain the virus, recording fewer than 900 infections — including 120 repatriate­d Lebanese — and 26 deaths, after imposing early lockdown measures and strictly implementi­ng restrictio­n on movement.

But over the past few days, government and health officials criticised carelessne­ss and lax implementa­tion of social distancing and other restrictio­ns among the public.

Iraq has also seen a rise in infections since curfew hours were shortened ahead of the holy month of Ramadan. Yesterday, the country recorded 119 new cases, according to figures from the Health Ministry, among the highest jumps since the government began documentin­g cases in late February.

At least 115 people have died among more than 3000 confirmed virus cases in Iraq, according to ministry numbers.

Case numbers were dipping before curfew hours were relaxed from 24 hours to 12, beginning in late April.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Rising unemployme­nt and a crashing currency have led to violent protests in Beirut.
Photo / AP Rising unemployme­nt and a crashing currency have led to violent protests in Beirut.

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