DUBAI: Oman’s land border will remain closed until further notice to curb the spread of coronavirus, daily Times of Oman reported.
Citizens wishing to return home should do so before 10 a.m. on Feb. 21, 2021 as “no individuals will be allowed to enter the Sultanate till the closure of land borders is lifted,” the report added.
The closure initially went into effect on Jan. 18 following Oman’s detection of its first case of the variant of the virus that emerged in Britain, on a resident who arrived from the UK.
The closure was set to last one week, but the authorities had warned of possible extensions.
Everyone who enters Oman, through land, sea or air, must undergo institutionalized isolation at their own expense, as authorities have caught individuals breaching home quarantine.
Earlier in February, Oman reported that people have been avoiding self-quarantining by getting elderly members of their families to wear their tracking bracelets.
“We have received messages of some people taking off their tracking bracelet after arriving at the country’s border crossings, and putting them on elderly people who do not usually leave the home,” the report quoted the Minister of Health Ahmed bin Mohammed Al-Saidi.
The Sultanate will also close all beaches, parks and leisure spaces starting today for two weeks.
From Friday, the maximum number of visitors in government departments, private establishments and commercial areas such as markets and restaurants will also be reduced to 50 percent of capacity. The new regulation will remain in place until further notice.
As of Wednesday, Oman has confirmed 136,377 coronavirus cases, 128,255 recovered patients and 1,537 deaths.
Oman beefs up coronavirus regulations, continues land border closure
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Oman beefs up coronavirus regulations, continues land border closure
- Citizens wishing to return home should do so before 10 a.m. on Feb. 21, 2021
- Oman reported that people have been avoiding self-quarantining by getting elderly members of their families to wear their tracking bracelets
Turkish lawmakers to vote on report advancing PKK peace process
- The vote in Ankara, proposes making legal reforms in parallel with the PKK laying down arms
ANKARA: A Turkish parliamentary commission was set to vote on Wednesday on adopting a draft report to facilitate the disarmament of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which would advance a peace process meant to end a more than 40-year conflict. The roughly 60-page report, shared with reporters ahead of the vote in Ankara, proposes making legal reforms in parallel with the PKK laying down arms, urging the judiciary to review legislation and comply with European Court of Human Rights and Constitutional Court rulings. Its core objectives are a “terrorism-free Turkiye” and strengthening democracy, said the draft, which presents a conditional legal framework that prompted some objections earlier in the week from opposition parties.
A vote to back the report would shift the peace process to the legislative theater, where President Tayyip Erdogan, Turkiye’s leader of more than two decades, has an opportunity to end a bloody conflict between the PKK and the state that has sown deep political, economic and social discord at home, and spread violence across borders into Iraq and Syria.
The commission was formed in August 2025 to support a potential new phase in efforts to end the conflict that has killed more than 40,000 people and stymied economic development in Turkiye’s mainly Kurdish southeast.
A vote to back the report would shift the peace process to the legislative theater, where President Tayyip Erdogan, Turkiye’s leader of more than two decades, has an opportunity to end a bloody conflict between the PKK and the state that has sown deep political, economic and social discord at home, and spread violence across borders into Iraq and Syria.
The commission was formed in August 2025 to support a potential new phase in efforts to end the conflict that has killed more than 40,000 people and stymied economic development in Turkiye’s mainly Kurdish southeast.
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