The Manila Times

‘Cambodia on brink of death’

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PHNOM PENH: Spiraling coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) cases have put Cambodia “on the brink of death,” its strongman premier Hun Sen has warned, as the country imposed lockdowns in the capital Phnom Penh and a nearby city.

The Southeast Asian kingdom has seen Covid-19 cases surge since February, when an outbreak was first detected among its Chinese expatriate community.

Authoritie­s said last week that hospitals in Phnom Penh were running out of beds and that they had transforme­d schools and wedding party halls into treatment centers, while Hun Sen threatened quarantine-breakers with jail time.

Phnom Penh and adjacent city Ta Khmau were Wednesday night placed under lockdown for two weeks to curb the spread, effectivel­y halting the movement of more than two million people.

“Please my people — join your efforts to end this dangerous event,” pled premier Hun Sen in a recorded address aired on state-run television late Wednesday night.

“We are on the brink of death already,” he said. “If we don’t join hands together, we will head to real death.”

Cambodia’s latest announced figures exceeded 4,800, but the premier said Wednesday that an additional 300 cases had been detected.

Phnom Penh and Ta Khmau residents are now barred from leaving their homes for two weeks except to go to the hospital or to buy medicine, while only two household members will be allowed out to buy food.

On Thursday morning, police blocked motorists from passing a checkpoint set up at the border between the two cities, with residents showing their ID cards hoping to pass through.

Blockades were also erected around the major Norodom Boulevard around the iconic Independen­ce Monument to prevent people from travelling.

While the kingdom has seen improvemen­ts in its healthcare in the past decade, its infrastruc­ture — especially in rural areas — is still poor, with a lack of services and qualified doctors.

Inequality also plagues the system, with reports of lower income families being turned away from hospitals.

Before the community outbreak was detected in February, Cambodia’s Covid-19 toll was comparativ­ely lower than its regional neighbors — but experts had chalked it up to the lack of widespread testing.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? CHAOS IN THE CITY
Police block motorists from passing a checkpoint due to lockdown restrictio­ns introduced to halt a surge in cases of Covid-19 in Phnom Penh on Saturday, April 17, 2021.
AFP PHOTO CHAOS IN THE CITY Police block motorists from passing a checkpoint due to lockdown restrictio­ns introduced to halt a surge in cases of Covid-19 in Phnom Penh on Saturday, April 17, 2021.

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