Arab News

Lebanese rush to shops, banks and cafes as 4-day virus lockdown lifted

PM urges citizens to ‘take responsibi­lity’ for stopping spread of COVID-19 as protesters return to streets

- Najia Houssari Beirut Assem Araji Head of Lebanon’s parliament­ary health committee

The end of Lebanon’s fourday lockdown on Monday saw citizens flood to shops, banks, cafes, and places of work amid government fears that ignoring social distancing guidelines could have serious “consequenc­es” for the country.

Pressures caused by the economic crisis and collapse of the Lebanese pound forced the decision to reopen the country for business a week before Eid Al-Fitr, despite random testing for the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) detecting new cases in the capital Beirut and elsewhere. Prime Minister Hassan Diab said: “Each of us must take responsibi­lity for himself.”

Monday also witnessed a resumption of virtual talks between the Lebanese government and representa­tives of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund aimed at easing the country’s dire financial situation. As the latest session of negotiatio­ns took place protesters returned to the streets to carry on their antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions, with sit-ins taking place outside the Palace of Justice in Beirut, the Ministry of Economy, and the Ministry of Social Affairs.

Many Lebanese emerging from the four-day curfew were reported not to be complying with government requests to wear a face mask and apply social distancing rules to avoid any further spread of COVID-19. Assem Araji, head of Lebanon’s parliament­ary health committee, told Arab News: “Continuing to close the country is no longer useful in light of the suffocatin­g economic crisis and the collapse of the Lebanese pound.

“The country had to be reopened because the people want to eat and the unemployme­nt rate touched 70 percent, according to the Ministry of Social Affairs.

“The condition for this return to work was the commitment to preventive measures, but people seem not to want to comply and we cannot put a soldier for every citizen to force them to comply. It is the responsibi­lity of individual­s to take care of themselves, their families and all who come into contact with them, and I fear that recklessne­ss will lead to consequenc­es.”

The end of the lockdown coincided with the release of the results of random tests conducted by medical teams in Beirut and other regions to help determine the epidemiolo­gical trend of the virus.

Seventeen Syrian and foreign workers living in a building in the Ras El Nabeh area of Beirut were found to have contracted COVID-19 and were immediatel­y placed under home quarantine by the Internal Security Forces. And a soldier from the municipali­ty of Libbaya in the western Bekaa district was also reported to have been infected with the virus.

In the towns and villages of Akkar in northern Lebanon, there was heavy traffic on roads as food stores, cafes and restaurant­s reopened with many people again reported to be ignoring preventive measures to control COVID-19. Sobhi Saqr, mayor of Hermel in the northern Bekaa, said there was confusion due to the government’s “lack of clarity” over the lifting of restrictio­ns.

The president of the Nabatieh Traders’ Associatio­n, Mohammed Kassem Melli, said: “The agony in the commercial sector has prompted us to pressure the concerned actors to allow us to reopen the markets, and the communicat­ions succeeded in allowing the opening of the commercial markets throughout the week leading up to Eid Al-Fitr.” Chlorinate­d swimming pools have been given the green light to reopen and the Minister of Education has recommende­d ending the academic year and promoting students to the next level, according to certain regulation­s.

Jean Beiruti, head of the Syndicate of Seaside Resort Operators, said the resumption of work would “be without profit, but rather a continuity, in the hope that the sector will survive in light of the economic crisis, which may not provide the option to go to the swimming pools for many.”

Wael Kassab, a member of the Merchants’ Associatio­n in the southern city of Sidon, said: “There was a remarkable movement of shoppers inside Sidon’s commercial market, but the majority of customers were surprised by the high prices. They were not eager to buy except in small amounts in shops selling kids’ clothes.”

Continuing to close the country is no longer useful in light of the suffocatin­g economic crisis and the collapse of the Lebanese pound.

 ?? Reuters ?? People walk past open shops in Beirut, as Lebanon is gradually reopening its economy following a shutdown imposed to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.
Reuters People walk past open shops in Beirut, as Lebanon is gradually reopening its economy following a shutdown imposed to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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