Bangkok Post

Lebanon enters strict lockdown to stem uptick

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BEIRUT: Lebanese hunkered down indoors yesterday on the first day of a strict 11-day lockdown imposed in a bid to slow down a sharp uptick in novel coronaviru­s cases.

The heightened restrictio­ns, which include a 24-hour curfew until January 25, come after some hospitals started to run out of beds to treat Covid patients.

In the capital, a trickle of trucks and cars ventured out onto the roads on Thursday, after state media reported caretaker health minister Hamad Hasan was admitted to hospital for treatement for Covid-19 the previous evening.

Under the new measures, non-essential workers are barred from leaving their homes, and supermarke­ts will operate delivery services only.

The restrictio­n has raised fears of food shortages in impoverish­ed and remote regions where deliveries are not readily available.

For several days, Lebanese have flooded supermarke­ts and chemists in a desperate bid to stock up.

Some are worried the new restrictio­ns will pile additional suffering on the country’s poorest.

Charity Save the Children said it accepted the need for a strict response to the coronaviru­s uptick, but said it was “very concerned that vulnerable families and their children will be left to deal with a catastroph­e on their own”.

Lebanon, a country of more than six million, was already grappling with its worst economic downturn in decades when the pandemic hit.

Previous lockdowns have forced businesses to close and deprived daily wage earners of an income in a country where more than half the population lives in poverty.

The World Bank Group on Tuesday approved a US$246 million (7.3 billion baht) aid package to help 786,000 vulnerable Lebanese, but it is unclear when that assistance will arrive. Recent days have seen Lebanon register record daily Covid caseloads in one of the steepest increases in transmissi­on worldwide.

In total, it has announced 231,936 cases since February last year, including 1,740 deaths.

Cases skyrockete­d after authoritie­s loosened restrictio­ns during the holiday season, allowing restaurant­s and night clubs to remain open until 3am, despite warnings from health profession­als.

A partial lockdown in place since Jan 7 has failed to halt the spread of the virus.

Parliament is expected to convene today to examine a bill to allow the import and use of vaccines, which authoritie­s have previously said will arrive in Lebanon by February.

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