Gulf Times

Thousands rush to quit Tbilisi ahead of curbs

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Thousands of Georgians rushed yesterday to get out of the capital Tbilisi ahead of a lockdown to be imposed as part of containmen­t measures to fight the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Motorways were jammed at the exits from Tbilisi as many families left the city, opting to spend the days of a stringent containmen­t in their country houses.

On Tuesday, Georgia’s Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia ordered that a state of emergency and general quarantine imposed last month be extended until May 10, also banning entry to and exit from four major cities – Tbilisi, Rustavi, Batumi, and Kutaisi – for 10 days starting evening yesterday.

Georgia has so far reported 306 cases of Covid-19 and three deaths, one of the lowest rates in Europe.

But after a record 26 new cases were confirmed on Tuesday, Gakharia said that “the country has moved on to the stage of a fullscale internal transmissi­on of the virus”.

“It is therefore necessary to tighten the measures even further,” he told a news conference.

Under the original quarantine conditions, residents were allowed to use their cars during the daytime, as long as there were no more than three people in a vehicle.

“We have to leave today because the city will be locked down tonight,” Tbilisi resident Tinatin Kapanadze, 24, told AFP, adding: “Better to go to the village instead of being locked in a flat.”

Yesterday Health Minister Ekaterine Tikaradze said Georgia’s hospitals would not be able to cope with a large-scale spread of the coronaviru­s as the tiny country does not have enough intensive care doctors to treat thousands of Covid-19 patients in a severe condition.

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