Turkey tightens controls in public places over virus threat

An empty square of the iconic Hagia Sophia in Istanbul after Turkish officials have repeatedly urged citizens to stay home and respect social distancing rules. (AFP)
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Updated 04 April 2020
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Turkey tightens controls in public places over virus threat

  • Turkey has so far recorded 425 coronavirus-related deaths and nearly 21,000 cases, most of them in the country’s economic capital Istanbul
  • From Saturday, all those going out to shops or markets must wear a face mask, Erdogan said

ISTANBUL: Turkey stepped up controls Saturday on crowded public spaces including markets and ferries in Istanbul a day after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan imposed the use of face masks to curb the coronavirus outbreak.
Turkey has so far recorded 425 coronavirus-related deaths and nearly 21,000 cases, most of them in the country’s economic capital Istanbul, according to official figures.
From Saturday, all those going out to shops or markets must wear a face mask, Erdogan said, calling on the population to maintain a distance of “three paces” from each other when outside.
At an Istanbul bazaar in the Besiktas neighborhood open every Saturday, police and local municipal employees handled the use of masks and hand disinfectants, while checking the temperature of incoming customers at the entrance.
Veli Yildirim, 50, who sells vegetables including tomatoes, said the measures came “too late.”
“We are the latest compared to the rest of the world. Even this is not enough, there should be a complete lockdown” in Istanbul, he told AFP.
A 60-year-old customer in the bazaar, Asuman Karaman wearing a mask, agreed: “If these measures had been taken one or two months earlier, maybe the virus would not have been so widespread.”
The bazaar looked quite calm — in stark contrast to its usual noisy and crowded state.
Vendors complained their business was hit badly.
“This has a had a big impact, there is no one at the market, at this time of the day, we have nothing to do here,” said Abbas Kose, who sells vine leaves.
At the ferries in Istanbul, passengers were seen wearing face masks.
The city’s mayor Ekrem Imamoglu has been calling for total confinement but authorities have so far stopped short of that.
As part of the measures taken nationwide, authorities suspended international flights, issued a confinement order for everyone aged under 20 and over 65 and shut schools.
Erdogan on Friday also said vehicles would no longer be able to leave or enter 31 towns and cities, including Istanbul, for 15 days.


Fire breaks out in Abu Dhabi industrial area after drone attack: media office

Updated 16 min 28 sec ago
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Fire breaks out in Abu Dhabi industrial area after drone attack: media office

  • The Ruwais Industrial Complex houses ⁠Abu Dhabi ‌National ‌Oil Company facilities
  • Military funeral ceremony for Emirati pilots who died in a helicopter crash held

DUBAI: A fire broke out in the Ruwais Industrial Complex in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday without causing any injuries so far, the media office of the UAE capital reported. 

The complex houses ⁠Abu Dhabi ‌National ‌Oil ​Company (ADNOC) facilities ‌that can ‌refine up to 922,000 barrels of oil ‌per day and serves as the ⁠central ⁠hub for the emirate’s downstream operations, including significant chemical, fertilizer, and industrial gas plants.

Meanwhile, the UAE Ministry of Defense said its air defenses were responding to incoming missile and drone threats from Iran.

 

 

The defense ministry also said that the military funeral ceremony for Emirati pilots Captain Saeed Al-Balooshi and First Lieutenant Ali Al-Taniji, who died following a helicopter crash due to a technical malfunction, was held at Zayed Military Hospital in Abu Dhabi.

The ceremony was attended by a number of senior leaders and officers from the Ministry of Defense, as well as family members.