Kuwait Times

Thailand virus cases rocket to 600

Fears of a full-blown crisis amid pandemic

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s confirmed coronaviru­s cases rose by a third to nearly 600, the kingdom announced yesterday, as fears of a full-blown crisis take hold in a country largely spared until now. Thailand’s health ministry announced the spike was mainly in the capital, but warned residents of Bangkok not to leave and risk spreading the virus around the country.

“We would like you to stay home. Do not travel upcountry,” said health ministry official Taweesin Visanuyoth­in. Southeast Asia has so far been spared the worst of the pandemic that has swept the world, confining nearly one billion to their homes and killing more than 13,000. But that could be about to change. With a boxing stadium and night club among the likely transmissi­on sites, Bangkok has now imposed tough restrictio­ns.

Virtually all public spaces have been shuttered, from shopping malls and beauty parlours to golf courses and swimming pools. Residents packed out supermarke­ts over the weekend to stockpile food, fearing a full lockdown. Transport links are also slowly being severed. A frontier crossing point near northern city Chiang Rai saw thousands of Thai and Myanmar citizens rushing to get home before land border closures came into effect.

Bangkok Airways and Thai AirAsia have cancelled all internatio­nal flights while Thai Lion Air has grounded its fleet entirely. Yet elsewhere in the tropical tourist destinatio­n, life continued unabated with beaches in Pattaya and Phuket thronged with sun-seekers. One doctor at Bangkok’s Chulalongk­orn hospital warned tougher measures were needed-even calling for three weeks of martial law to force people to self-isolate.

The nation is “on the verge of a crisis” and heading for the Italian model, a doctor told AFP, adding hospitals are already straining under the pressure. Meanwhile Vietnam on Saturday imposed a blanket ban on all foreigners entering the country, even though the number of confirmed cases still hovers below 100. In under-developed Myanmar and Laos, there is increasing scepticism about claims of zero cases as fears grow for the their decrepit healthcare systems and fragile economies. —AFP

 ??  ?? BANGKOK: Father Paul Nettham (center), wearing a face mask as a preventive measure against the spread of the COVID-19 novel coronaviru­s, greets devotees after a mass at the Holy Redeemer church in Bangkok yesterday. —AFP
BANGKOK: Father Paul Nettham (center), wearing a face mask as a preventive measure against the spread of the COVID-19 novel coronaviru­s, greets devotees after a mass at the Holy Redeemer church in Bangkok yesterday. —AFP

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