Turkey urges discipline ahead of new COVID-19 curfews
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[November 18, 2020]
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey's
government urged "tight discipline" on Wednesday as the country prepared
for new weekend curfews, online schooling and limits on restaurants and
cafes that are to begin Friday evening and last through year end to
contain the pandemic.
President Tayyip Erdogan announced the tighter restrictions on Tuesday
in response to a coronavirus surge that has brought reported daily cases
https://tmsnrt.rs/3nAYinX and deaths https://tmsnrt.rs/35LkG8h to levels
last seen in late April, just after the initial peak.
"Without losing anything, the virus has gone into the mass infection
period," Health Minister Fahrettin Koca told reporters in parliament.
"It seems we must put our lives under tight discipline for some time,"
broadcasters quoted him as saying.
COVID-19 has killed a total of 11,704 in Turkey according to official
figures that opposition lawmakers and medical groups have criticised for
masking the true scale of the outbreak.
The government - which since July has not reported confirmed
asymptomatic cases of COVID-19 - said there were 3,819 new symptomatic
patients and 103 deaths on Tuesday.
In a notice, the interior ministry said restaurants, cafes, hairdressers
and shopping malls will only operate from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. locally
(0700 GMT to 1700 GMT). For dining, only takeaway and delivery services
will be allowed.
Under the new curbs, which will take effect from 8 p.m. (1700 GMT) on
Friday, cinemas will be closed and schools will provide online education
for the rest of the year.
A partial weekend lockdown will be imposed nationwide until further
notice, the ministry said, adding these would not disrupt supply and
production chains.
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Man wearing a protective mask stands in front of a fish and bread
restaurant, amid the spread of COVID-19 in Istanbul, Turkey November
7, 2020. REUTERS/Murad Sezer
Meral Aksener, leader of the opposition Iyi Party, said the new
measures were insufficient. "I am calling to the ruling party from
here: the pandemic looks out of control. The picture in Istanbul is
a total catastrophe," she said.
She urged a 14-day nationwide lockdown and reiterated a call by
Istanbul's mayor who said virus deaths in the city alone outstrip
reported nationwide figures. Istanbul reported 9,872
pandemic-related deaths as of Nov. 14 compared to the national
government's reported 11,418, she said.
"There is something off with this because there is no transparency,
no honesty," Aksener told her party's lawmakers in parliament.
(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun, Ali Kucukgocmen and Tuvan Gumrukcu;
Editing by Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Jonathan Spicer)
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