Bangkok Post

Pakistan imposes Eid holiday shutdown as virus cases soar

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>>ISLAMABAD: Pakistan yesterday began a nine-day shutdown affecting travel and tourist hotspots in a bid to prevent a surge in Covid-19 cases during the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.

Already battling a third wave of infections and increasing­ly nervous about the crisis across the border in India, the government has imposed the most severe restrictio­ns since a one-month lockdown in April last year.

“These measures have been necessitat­ed by the extremely dangerous situation which has been created in the region with the spread of virulent mutations of the virus,” tweeted planning minister Asad Umar, who has been leading the government response to the outbreak.

Eid, which comes at the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, usually sees the mass movement of people around the country and tourist spots crowded with Pakistanis.

Last year the country saw a spike in cases in the weeks after the celebratio­ns.

Businesses, hotels and restaurant­s as well as markets and parks will be closed, while public transport between provinces and within cities has been halted.

The military has been mobilised to monitor the restrictio­ns.

Mosques, however, which have been packed each night throughout Ramadan — with few people wearing masks — will remain open. Authoritie­s fear curbs on places of worship could ignite confrontat­ion in the deeply conservati­ve Islamic republic.

Impoverish­ed Pakistan has recorded more than 850,000 infections and 18,600 deaths, but with limited testing and a ramshackle healthcare sector, many fear the true extent of the disease is much worse.

Health officials have warned that hospitals are operating at close to capacity and they have rushed to increase the number of intensive care beds.

Internatio­nal flights have been slashed and border crossings with Iran and Afghanista­n largely closed.

Flights and land crossings with neighbouri­ng India — reeling from a devastatin­g outbreak with hundreds of thousands of new cases a day — were closed before the pandemic because of political tensions.

Pakistan, which has so far vaccinated only a fraction of its population, received its first batch of 1.2 million AstraZenec­a doses Saturday under the delayed Covax global vaccine sharing scheme.

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