Arab Times

Iraq faces full local lockdowns as virus cases jump

Syria so far not hit at scale feared

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BAGHDAD, May 19, (Agencies): Iraq will impose a complete lockdown on some areas of the capital, the country’s new health minister said on Monday, amid an uptick in coronaviru­s cases in recent weeks since curfew hours were relaxed.

The new government under Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi was sworn into power just two weeks ago following a fivemonth leadership vacuum. Responding to the pandemic and a severe economic crisis brought on by falling oil prices is foremost on its agenda.

Areas of Baghdad believed to play a role in spreading the virus will face a full lockdown as of Wednesday for a period of two weeks, Health Minister Hassan al-Tamimi said in a statement.

The areas lie in Baghdad’s peripherie­s and are mostly impoverish­ed and over-crowded. They include Sadr City, Habibia, Hurriya, Shula, Ameria, and Kamalia.

Al-Tamimi said in the statement the measures were taken in view of the rising number of cases in recent weeks and to stem the spread of the virus, according to the statement.

Meanwhile Iraq declared on Monday recording four deaths and 150 infection cases with the novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19), the highest daily proportion of such cases since the pandemic broke out in the nation.

Iraqi Ministry of Health said in a statement whole number of infection cases climbed to 3,554 throughout the country including Kurdish regions.

It said among the 3,554 infections, there were 127 deaths and 2,310 recoveries.

Monday is the second consecutiv­e day Iraq witnesses record hike of infections -- by local standards. Yesterday’s count of the contaminat­ions with the deadly bug amounted to 144

The number of confirmed cases per day has risen since curfew hours were relaxed during the holy month of Ramadan from 5 p.m. to 5 a.m.. Before curfew hours were relaxed, only between 22-30 new infections were being reported daily.

Sudan’s health emergency committee also said it will extend the lockdown of its capital, Khartoum, and the surroundin­g province for two weeks, starting on Tuesday.

The strict order was renewed as the number of known infections jumped to 2,591 in the country, stoking fears that more cases will overwhelm the state’s dilapidate­d health system. The curfew bars citizens in Khartoum from visiting families in farflung provinces and potentiall­y bringing the virus with them during Eid al-Fitr, the three-day festival that marks the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

Meanwhile, the U.N. special envoy for Syria on Monday said the pandemic “has so far not hit Syria at the scale initially feared - but also fears that it still could do so.”

Geir Pedersen told the U.N. Security Council that the officially reported number of cases is 64 in Syria, of which 58 are in government-controlled areas and 6 are in the northeast, but he cautioned that testing has been limited. No cases have yet been reported in the northwest, the last rebel-held stronghold, he said.

Pedersen called for unimpeded humanitari­an access across conflict lines to deliver assistance, including to prevent and protect against the outbreak in government-controlled areas, in the northwest, and in the northeast “where gaps in medical supplies have widened.”

He again urged the Syrian government and all other combatants to follow the example of other government­s in the region and elsewhere and initiate the release of detainees held by both sides in the conflict.

 ??  ?? In this Friday, May 15, 2020 photo, Dr Melek Nur Aslan, the local health director for Fatih, a large district in the historic peninsula of Istanbul adjusts her goggles as she prepares to deploy a team of contact tracers with Turkey’s Health Ministry’s coronaviru­s contact tracing team. Teams of contact tracers in Istanbul, the epicenter of the pandemic in Turkey and its most populous city, and also nationwide, are going house to house to test people experienci­ng COVID-19 symptoms and inform patients on isolation. (AP)
In this Friday, May 15, 2020 photo, Dr Melek Nur Aslan, the local health director for Fatih, a large district in the historic peninsula of Istanbul adjusts her goggles as she prepares to deploy a team of contact tracers with Turkey’s Health Ministry’s coronaviru­s contact tracing team. Teams of contact tracers in Istanbul, the epicenter of the pandemic in Turkey and its most populous city, and also nationwide, are going house to house to test people experienci­ng COVID-19 symptoms and inform patients on isolation. (AP)

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