Jordan ramps up COVID-19 testing as new cases emerge

Assistant Secretary General for Healthcare Affairs at the Ministry of Health Adnan Ishaq assured the quality of the testing devices, which provide results in less than 15 minutes.(Petra)
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Updated 12 April 2020
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Jordan ramps up COVID-19 testing as new cases emerge

  • More than 1,000 tests were expected to be carried out in all governorates in Jordan
  • Jordan's total number of coronavirus cases has reached 381

DUBAI: Dozens of medical teams have continued random coronavirus testing on hospital visitors and people in their homes on Saturday in Jordan, as the 48-hour comprehensive curfew has ended.

More than 1,000 tests were expected to be carried out in all governorates in Jordan, according to local media The Jordan Times. The medical teams used rapid testing devices and PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) at authorized laboratories.

Assistant Secretary General for Healthcare Affairs at the Ministry of Health Adnan Ishaq assured the quality of the testing devices, which provide results in less than 15 minutes, adding they were sourced from Germany and China.

People who have been in contact with COVID-19 patients in the last 14 days were also tested.

The efforts came as nine new cases of coronavirus have been recorded in Jordan, bringing total number to 381. The cases include seven members of a family of a man previously confirmed with the virus. The eight case was the man’s coworker.

The ninth case was detected in the isolated Marqab area.


USS Gerald Ford leaves Crete as Iran talks begin: AFP

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USS Gerald Ford leaves Crete as Iran talks begin: AFP

  • Its departure comes amid a new round of indirect talks between the United States and Iran on the latter’s nuclear program
  • Washington has more than a dozen warships in the Middle East: one aircraft carrier, nine destroyers and three other combat ships
SOUDA, Greece: The USS Gerald R. Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, sent to the Mediterranean this week in a military build-up to put pressure on Iran, left a naval base in Crete Thursday, an AFP photographer said.
Its departure came as a new round of indirect talks between the United States and Iran on the latter’s nuclear program, mediated by Oman’s foreign minister, opened in Geneva Thursday morning.
The vessel has been at the US Naval Support Activity Souda Bay base in Crete since Monday. The US embassy in Athens has declined to comment on the carrier’s presence, forwarding questions to the Pentagon in Washington.
President Donald Trump ordered strikes on Iran last year. He has repeatedly threatened Tehran with fresh military action if it does not cut a new deal on its contentious nuclear program, which the West fears is aimed at building an atomic weapon.
Washington has more than a dozen warships in the Middle East: one aircraft carrier — the USS Abraham Lincoln — nine destroyers and three other combat ships.
It is rare for there to be two US aircraft carriers, which carry dozens of warplanes and are crewed by thousands of sailors, in the Middle East.