Kuwait Times

Jordan deploys drones to fight virus pandemic

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AMMAN: Jordan on Sunday started to deploy drones to fight the coronaviru­s pandemic, joining a host of Middle East countries using the technology to enforce curfews, deliver public health announceme­nts and even monitor people’s temperatur­es. Jordan has declared five deaths and 323 cases of COVID-19 and says it has arrested at least 1,600 people for violating a nationwide curfew in force since last month. “The armed forces and security services will ensure the curfew is being respected by using modern technology such as drones and surveillan­ce cameras,” Minister of State for Informatio­n, Amjad Al-Adayleh, told a press briefing late Saturday.

In neighborin­g Israel, where the pandemic has seen a flurry of new technologi­es emerge designed to contain transmissi­on, authoritie­s are also using the unmanned aircraft. Israeli police said Sunday that teams in the northern coastal city of Naharia were using drones to patrol the beachfront area and enforce movement restrictio­ns. A police spokespers­on said that the force had also been using the technology in other parts of Israel in response to the pandemic.

Several states in the oil-rich Gulf have embraced drones in the fight against COVID19. Kuwait, which has largely locked down the country, sent drones to the skies in mid-March to broadcast messages in multiple languages urging people to return to their homes. Later in the month, in the United Arab Emirates, police were using drones equipped with a loudspeake­r in the emirate of Sharjah to order people to stay home, while police in Dubai have taken similar steps.

The drones were giving instructio­ns in several languages, including Arabic, English, Urdu, Hindi and Bengali. Expatriate­s make up over 80 percent of the UAE population. In Saudi Arabia, municipal authoritie­s have deployed drones to measure the body temperatur­e of shoppers in Buraidah, in the north-central Al-Qassim region, the state-run Saudi Press Agency reported in late March. The drones were fitted with artificial intelligen­ce-enabled thermal cameras, SPA said.

And in Oman, authoritie­s have used the aircraft to reduce gatherings in public places in the capital Muscat. Qatar, meanwhile, announced on Thursday that it was carrying out a drone-based “awareness drive” that targeted foreign workers, just ahead of the Islamic weekend. The move came after images of what appeared to be foreign nationals praying on the roof of apartment buildings in a Doha suburb the previous weekend were published by local media.

The Qatari interior ministry’s Twitter account on Thursday posted a video simulation of a drone directing announceme­nts at South Asian workers. Ninety percent of Qatar’s 2.75 million people are expats, and many are from developing countries. “The Ministry of Interior carries out awareness drive among expatriate communitie­s using drones,” the English-language tweet said. “The messages were announced in different languages to stay away from social gatherings and not to leave home except for necessary purposes.”

Qatar has officially reported three deaths and 1,325 cases of COVID-19. A densely populated working class district southwest of the capital Doha known as the Industrial Area has been under strict lockdown since mid-March, with residents prohibited from leaving, after a number of coronaviru­s cases were detected there. — AFP

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