VIDEO: Robots enforce Tunis street COVID-19 lockdown, stopping curfew breakers

The unmanned ground vehicles are called P-Guard and locally developed by Enova Robotics. They are being used by the Ministry of Interior to enforce its lockdown of Tunis. (Enova Robotics)
Short Url
Updated 30 March 2020
Follow

VIDEO: Robots enforce Tunis street COVID-19 lockdown, stopping curfew breakers

  • Robots are stopping curfew violators and shouting orders at them
  • Tunis has been on lockdown since March 22

TUNIS: Tunis police are taking social distancing to another level, using robots to enforce the city’s coronavirus lockdown to prevent the spread of the disease.

In one video that has been widely shared across social media, a man is confronted by the P-Guard robot as he is seen stepping out of his Tunis apartment block into the empty street.

In scenes more fitting with a futuristic science fiction movie, the robot then shouts at the man: “Are you aware of the lockdown?” and demands to know where he is going.

He explains he is going to buy cigarettes, the robot tells him to carry on, but to be fast and to go straight back home.

The P-Guard robots were locally developed by Enova Robotics and are being used by the Ministry of Interior to enforce the Tunis lockdown which came into force on March 22.

Founded in 2014, Enova describes its futuristic creation as a “rugged security robot for multi-terrain applications.”

The robot uses several infrared cameras to function, which are arranged to cover the robot’s surroundings and it is also fitted with a thermal camera and a sound and light alarm system. 

The robot incorporates GPS to locate itself in its environment as well as a laser telemetry system.

Tunisia has 278 confirmed cases of COVID-19, eight people have died from the virus.


Macron, Iraqi Kurdish leader urge ‘de-escalation’ in Syria

Updated 52 min 51 sec ago
Follow

Macron, Iraqi Kurdish leader urge ‘de-escalation’ in Syria

  • The Islamist-led authorities in Damascus are seeking to extend their control over all of Syria, after toppling former president Bashar Assad a little over a year ago

PARIS, France: France’s President Emmanuel Macron and the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, Nechirvan Barzani, in telephone talks on Saturday urged a cessation of fighting in Syria, the French presidency said.
They “called on all parties for an immediate de-escalation and a permanent ceasefire,” it said, after fighting in recent days between the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and government troops in the country’s north.
The SDF control swathes of Syria’s oil-rich north and northeast, much of which they captured during the civil war and the battle against the Daesh group.
The Islamist-led authorities in Damascus are seeking to extend their control over all of Syria, after toppling former president Bashar Assad a little over a year ago.
Both sides signed a deal in March last year to merge the semi-autonomous Syrian Kurdish administration and its forces into the new government, but implementation has largely stalled.
Macron and Barzani said they backed “the immediate resumption of talks on integrating the SDF into the Syrian state,” the French presidency added.