Kuwait Times

Defense Minister discusses with officials anti-coronaviru­s action

Interior Ministry prioritize­s elderly, disabled in granting waivers to curfew rules

- By Jamie Etheridge

Curfew Diaries: Day 1

The sky was a brilliant glowing orange and rosy pink at 5 pm yesterday, just as the sun began sinking toward the horizon. We sat on our small balcony, awaiting the siren that would mark the start of Kuwait’s nationwide curfew, a first experience for me and my family. But at 5 pm we heard only the garble of someone speaking in Arabic through a loudspeake­r, incomprehe­nsible and far away.

I was disappoint­ed, wanting and almost needing the loud, piercing drama of the civil defense sirens as a way to mark this new era - life under curfew in Kuwait. The curfew is only partial - from 5 pm to 4 am and much of normal life continues during the day, unabated.

The curfew is both scary and reassuring, a sign of the seriousnes­s of the pandemic and at the same time, of the government’s determinat­ion to arrest its spread, to protect all of us and keep the country safe and healthy.

I am both comforted and terrified. Cocooned inside the shelter of my flat, working from home when I can while my children play and read and squabble around me, life seems utterly, boringly normal. I’ve ventured out a few times, to go to the office and to the grocery, and each time the world seems perfectly sane.

But at the same time, in other parts of the world, life has come to a crashing halt and hundreds have died or are dying daily. In Kuwait, there may be danger lurking on the hand rails of the grocery carts at the jamiya (co-op society) or in the cough of a colleague at a press conference. Death, or at least serious illness, has found a new, devious means of reaching us inside the safe bubble of our everyday lives.

The pandemic cares not for national borders, age or education. It is certainly worse for the aged and infirm, for those with comorbidit­ies. But all of us are vulnerable and many of us won’t survive. It seems like a nightmare, something from the Middle Ages when the plague swept through Europe. What we have from those times are the stories and histories of those who survived, who witnessed the horror.

What we have now are the heroes of the modern age - the doctors, nurses, lab techs and hospital staff who risk their own health daily to save the lives of the infected, while protecting the rest of us. There are also the everyday heroes like police officers, delivery drivers and cooks, domestic helpers and grocery store clerks, government officials and others who are linked arm-in-arm in a protective chain, holding the everyday world together as we battle for survival, for normalcy.

But these are not normal times. The coronaviru­s COVID-19 has now infected more than 338,000 people worldwide, with nearly 15,000 deaths (as of Monday, March 23). It has spread across the world and continues to pull under its weight not only the vulnerable, the elderly and the immunocomp­romised, but all of us.

Ten days ago, Kuwait closed its airport to commercial flights and the lockdown began. Tens of thousands of people work from their homes or not at all, many of them losing their salaries or their income. Schoolchil­dren are ‘homeschool­ing’ and all public places have been closed, including mosques, beaches, parks, mass transit, malls, salons, spas, daycare centers and all government ministries and department­s. The economy, our livelihood­s, and the fabric of our society will all be transforme­d by this pandemic in ways we can’t even see yet.

The government has asked since the beginning for people to stay home and not go out except for food and necessitie­s. But many people ignored the request and carried on with life as normal, resulting in the curfew.

The curfew. A new not-normal; a pandemic-induced normal that is meant to keep us safe but is as terrifying simply for what it means. Now we have no choice but to acknowledg­e the threat and to adjust, to find a way to survive and thrive even as the world threatens to collapse around us. The curfew may prove the greatest hero of all, the competitiv­e advantage that gives humanity the upper hand over this pandemic.

KUWAIT: Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Sheikh Ahmad Mansour Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah discussed on Sunday with top officials the package of measures that have been enforced in the country against the novel pandemic, coronaviru­s. Minister Sheikh Ahmad Mansour met with Interior Ministry Undersecre­tary Lt Gen Essam Al-Nahham, Undersecre­tary of the National Guard Lieutenant General Hashim Al-Rifai and Director General of Kuwait’s Fire Service Directorat­e (KFSD) Lieutenant General Khaled Al-Mekrad, discussing precaution­s that have been taken in implementa­tion of the cabinet decisions to face spread of coronaviru­s. The army said in a statement that the officials discussed during the meeting coordinati­on and joint action by the ministries of defense and interior, the guards and the fire department, as part of the fight against the pandemic. Sheikh Ahmad was briefed during the meeting about measures taken by the various security sectors to back up all state department­s in the emergency situation. The discussion­s also dealt with preparing new quarantine­s.

Enforce the law Meanwhile, Deputy Prime Minister and Interior

Minister Anas Al-Saleh said Sunday that security forces and Kuwait National Guard personnel would enforce the law during the partial curfew, which aimed at curbing the spread of the coronaviru­s. Saleh made the remarks during a field tour at major crossroads and highways to see first-hand compliance with the daily curfew, which was imposed by the government to start from 5:00 pm until 4:00 am, the Ministry of interior said in a statement. Saleh, also Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs, urged security forces to deal decisively with anyone violating the curfew. Saleh commended the security forces in enforcing the curfew, which ultimately aimed at preserving wellbeing of public. Saleh warned earlier that anyone caught breaching the curfew will be jailed for up to three years and fined KD 10,000 pursuant to Civil Defense Law.

Elderly people

In the meantime, Saleh said that the security institutio­n takes into considerat­ion conditions of elderly people and persons with disabiliti­es while issuing permits to exempt them from restrictio­ns relating to curfew. Saleh reminded all personnel of the security institutio­n of the need to make life easier for those people, according to a press release from the Interior Ministry’s Public Relations and Security Media Department. He made the comments after making an inspection tour at the security waivers center in Al-Adan. Accompanie­d by Lt Gen Nahham, they were briefed on the regulation­s set for issuing security permits regarding the persons entitled for these waivers and operating system of the center as well as the controls on movement of individual­s during the partial 11-hour curfew. The minister commended the preparedne­ss of security personnel to deal with the current emergency, appreciati­ng the cooperatio­n shown by everybody, the statement added.— KUNA

 ??  ?? KUWAIT: Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Sheikh Ahmad Mansour Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah meets with top officials to discuss precaution­s against the spread of coronaviru­s. — KUNA photos
KUWAIT: Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Sheikh Ahmad Mansour Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah meets with top officials to discuss precaution­s against the spread of coronaviru­s. — KUNA photos
 ??  ?? Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Anas Al-Saleh is seen during a field tour at major cross-roads and highways.
Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Anas Al-Saleh is seen during a field tour at major cross-roads and highways.
 ??  ?? Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Anas Al-Saleh is seen during an inspection tour at the security waivers center in Al-Adan.
Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Anas Al-Saleh is seen during an inspection tour at the security waivers center in Al-Adan.
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