Lebanon puts Bcharri town under lockdown as stranded nationals return

The Lebanese citizens were repatriated aboard the Middle East Airlines plane. (File/AFP)
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Updated 12 April 2020
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Lebanon puts Bcharri town under lockdown as stranded nationals return

  • People will not be allowed to enter or exit the town until COVID-19 tests are over
  • The Lebanese government has repatriated 123 citizens from Kuwait

DUBAI: Lebanese town Bcharri went on lockdown as local authorities continued to administer coronavirus tests, The Daily Star in Lebanon reported on Saturday.

People will not be allowed to enter or exit the town until COVID-19 tests are over.

The Bcharri Governmental Hospital reported 50 new cases of coronavirus infections on (day). Mayor Freddy Keyrouz said that the surge in figures was due to increased testing.

“Yesterday we tested around 50, today we will finish testing 150. We expect to test 500 more over the next four days,” Keyrouz told The Daily Star.

The mayor said Bcharri municipality does the testing for free.

Meanwhile, the government has repatriated 123 citizens from Kuwait aboard the Middle East Airlines on Saturday, according to the state agency NNA.

The arrivals were checked by doctors and medical teams at the Beirut Airport where they underwent medical tests. Passengers were later taken to hotels for quarantine

Lebanon has confirmed that people 630 are infected with the virus, while 77 have recovered and 20 have died.


Syrian government, Kurdish forces announce integration deal

Updated 30 January 2026
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Syrian government, Kurdish forces announce integration deal

  • Under the agreement, forces that had amassed on front lines in the country’s north would pull back
  • Security forces ‌will deploy to the ‌centers ⁠of the ‌cities of Hasakah and Qamishli in the northeast

DAMASCUS: The Syrian government and the Kurdish-led group the Syrian Democratic Forces said on Friday they had ​agreed to a comprehensive ceasefire and a phased integration of military and administrative bodies into the Syrian state under a broad deal.

Under the agreement, forces that had amassed on front lines in the country’s north would pull back and Interior ‌Ministry security forces ‌will deploy to the ‌centers ⁠of ​the ‌cities of Hasakah and Qamishli in the northeast, both currently held by the SDF. Local security forces will be merged.

The sides announced the deal after Syrian government forces under President Ahmed Al-Sharaa captured swathes of northern and eastern ⁠Syria from the SDF this month, forcing the ‌Kurdish forces to retreat into a ‍shrinking enclave.

The agreement ‍includes the formation of a military division ‍that will include three SDF brigades, in addition to the formation of a brigade for forces in the SDF-held town of Kobani, also known ​as Ain Al-Arab, which will be affiliated to the governorate of Aleppo.

“The agreement ⁠aims to unify Syrian territory and achieve full integration in the region by strengthening cooperation between the concerned parties and unifying efforts to rebuild the country,” according to the deal as announced by the SDF.

A senior Syrian government official told Reuters the deal was final and had been reached late on Thursday night, and that implementation was to begin ‌immediately.