Mindanao Times

East European nations launch virus fightback

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SLOVAKIA and the Czech Republic on Thursday said they were closing borders to stem the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, while Latvia and Lithuania closed schools and banned mass gatherings.

The Czech Republic, which has 109 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and no deaths, declared a 30-day state of emergency Thursday and closed its borders to people from 15 “risk countries”.

Prague also banned citizens from entering the so-called risk zone, which includes Austria, Belgium, Britain, China, Denmark, France, Germany, Iran, Italy, the Netherland­s, Norway, South Korea, Spain and

Switzerlan­d.

The Czech Republic will also ban buses, trains and boats from taking passengers across the border starting Saturday, unless they are taking citizens back from abroad or foreigners home.

It has also restricted internatio­nal air transport to Prague’s Vaclav Havel Airport Prague.

Neighbouri­ng Slovakia, which has 21 confirmed cases, said it would close its borders starting Friday to all foreigners except those with a residence permit.

All Slovaks who return from abroad will meanwhile have to be

quarantine­d for two weeks.

Polish citizens will still be allowed to enter Slovakia at border crossings with Poland. Many Poles work in Slovak factories and mines or go on skiing vacations in the Slovak part of the Tatra mountains.

Slovakia said it was banning internatio­nal bus and train transport and closing internatio­nal airports. It is also closing schools, which the Czech Republic had already done earlier this week.

Both countries announced Thursday they would ban mass cultural and sports events.

The Czech Republic has banned gatherings of more than 30 people and closed all gyms, swimming pools, clubs and libraries.

Slovakia announced that wellness centres, aqua parks and bars would close for two weeks but restaurant­s and cafes will remain open. - ‘Social distancing’ Baltic state Latvia, which has 16 confirmed cases of the coronaviru­s and no deaths, declared a state of emergency starting Friday until April 14.

But Latvia’s borders remain open and there is no ban on flights or maritime traffic.

All Latvian schools and universiti­es will close. Public gatherings of more than 200 people as well as sports and rehearsals for cultural events will be banned during the emergency period.

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