The Daily Telegraph

Qatar imposes jail sentences for failing to don face masks

- By Our Foreign Staff

QATAR yesterday began enforcing the world’s toughest penalties of up to three years imprisonme­nt for failing to wear masks in public, as it battles one of the world’s highest coronaviru­s infection rates.

More than 30,000 people have tested positive for Covid-19 in the tiny Gulf country – 1.1 per cent of the 2.75million population – although just 15 people have died.

Only the micro-states of San Marino and the Vatican had higher per-capita infection rates, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

Violators of Qatar’s new rules will face up to three years in jail and fines as high as £45,000.

Drivers alone in their vehicles are exempt from the requiremen­t, but several expats have said police were stopping cars at checkpoint­s to warn them of the new rules before they came into force.

Most of the customers who gathered outside money lenders on Doha’s Banks Street yesterday wore masks, while those who did not produced a face covering when asked.

“From today it’s very strict,” said Majeed, a taxi driver waiting for business in the busy pedestrian area, who wore a black neoprene mask.

Wearing a mask is currently mandatory in around 50 countries, although scientists are divided on how effective they are. Authoritie­s in Chad have made it an offence to be unmasked in public, on pain of 15 days in prison.

In Morocco similar rules can see violators jailed for three months and fined up to 1,300 dirhams (£107).

Qatari authoritie­s have warned that gatherings during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan may have increased infections.

Abdullatif al-khal, co-chair of Qatar’s National Pandemic Preparedne­ss Committee, said on Thursday that there was “a huge risk in gatherings of families” for Ramadan meals.

“[They] led to a significan­t increase in the number of infections among Qataris,” he said.

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