The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sri Lanka to reimpose selective lockdown a er cases spike

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Sri Lanka will reimpose selective lockdown restrictio­ns from Sunday to restrict large gatherings after recording its biggest daily surge in coronaviru­s infections – most found in citizens repatriate­d last week from Kuwait.

The island nation on Tuesday lifted a shutdown on the capital and a neighbouri­ng district, two weeks after easing it in other parts of the nation.

But after more than 250 returnees from Kuwait were found to be infected with coronaviru­s, authoritie­s decided to impose lockdowns on days when crowds were likely to form -- including the planned funeral of a popular minister.

The health ministry said that out of 460 Sri Lankans who returned from Kuwait this week, some 252 had tested positive for coronaviru­s.

All the returnees were being held in quarantine.

Officials said the lockdown will apply on Sunday, the day of the funeral of tea plantation trade union leader and government minister Arumugam Thondaman, who died Tuesday.

Tens of thousands of mourners from his Ceylon Workers Congress party had been expected to attend.

It will then be lifted until Thursday, when it will be imposed again for two days to coincide with a Buddhist holiday.

Under lockdown restrictio­ns, no-one is allowed to leave home unless they are involved in essential services.

Officials said new cases of coronaviru­s were also found at a navy camp outside Colombo.

Some 771 sailors and their immediate family members have so far tested positive from the facility, out of a nationwide total of 1,469 cases.

Ten people have died from the virus, including a woman who returned from Kuwait last week.

Officials said they were scaling back repatriati­ons in order not to overwhelm facilities.

“It is not easy to increase quarantine capacity overnight,” government spokesman Bandula Gunawardan­a told reporters.

“We are also building hospital capacity to bring back more Sri Lankans who are stranded abroad.”

Some 41,000 of around 1.5 million Sri Lankans employed abroad have registered with authoritie­s asking to return home.

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 ?? — AFP file photo ?? A security personnel (right) checks the body temperatur­e of commuters after arriving by train at Fort Railway station in Colombo as authoritie­s eased the 24-hour curfew as a preventive measure against the spread of the Covid-19 coronaviru­s after 67 days.
— AFP file photo A security personnel (right) checks the body temperatur­e of commuters after arriving by train at Fort Railway station in Colombo as authoritie­s eased the 24-hour curfew as a preventive measure against the spread of the Covid-19 coronaviru­s after 67 days.

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