Gulf Today

Tebboune urges discipline to counter virus

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ALGIERS: Algeria n president abdel m adj id tebbou ne late on Tuesday urged citizens to be “discipline­d” to help overcome the coronaviru­s outbreak even as the number of cases and deaths rose.

Tebboune said on state television that the government is still able to handle the situation despite a fall in energy earnings, the main source of state finances.

Opec member Algeria earlier this month decided to cut public spending by 30 per cent, halve planned energy investment for this year to $7 billion and delay some social and economic projects after the coronaviru­s caused a sharp fall in global oil prices.

“You must be discipline­d. We lack discipline,” Tebboune said. “People must respect preventive measures and doctors’ advice.”

Some Algerians have ignored steps taken by the government to limit the spread of the virus including a night curfew in 10 provinces and a full lockdown in the Bilda area, south of the capital Algiers.

The government will spend $100 million to import equipment including 100 million masks from China in addition to a local production of 90,000 masks per day.

“We have enough capabiliti­es to cope with the crisis,” Tebboune said. “Regarding food, we have stocks for at least five months. There is no reason to panic.”

Algerians have rushed to buy staple foods, including semolina and flour, in large proportion­s since the start of the coronaviru­s outbreak, causing shortages in some provinces.

Algeria will next week extend the closure of schools, universiti­es and mosques, Tebboune said.

Separately, Mauritania said it will open an investigat­ion into its first coronaviru­s fatality, after a middle-aged woman who had been quarantine­d died after a sudden onset of COVID-19.

On Tuesday, the Mauritania­n Informatio­n Agency reported that the West African state had recorded its first coronaviru­s death in a 48-year-old French-mauritania­n dual national who tested positive after she died.

The woman had been quarantine­d alongside 16 other French nationals who landed in Mauritania in mid-march, in one of the last flights to reach the country before it banned internatio­nal arrivals.

N’diaye Mamadou, an official in charge of the isolation centre in the capital Nouakchott, told state TV that the woman’s case was unusual because she did not initially present symptoms.

She began to feel ill on Sunday evening -- just before she was due to leave quarantine -- before her condition worsened on Monday morning. She then died en route to hospital on Monday, Mamadou said.

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