Lebanon goes into COVID-19 lockdown for Orthodox Easter weekend

Lebanon in January imposed an 11-day total lockdown in a bid to stem the spread of the coronavirus. (AFP file photo)
Short Url
Updated 29 April 2021
Follow

Lebanon goes into COVID-19 lockdown for Orthodox Easter weekend

  • Health officials confirmed 1,478 new coronavirus infection cases overnight

DUBAI: Lebanon goes into a three-day complete lockdown over the Orthodox Easter celebrations to minimize the risk of COVID-19 transmission during the weekend, authorities have announced.

The country’s ministerial committee for the follow up on coronavirus measures issued the decision for a new lockdown to be imposed from May 1 until May 3, with a round-the-clock curfew and only vital sectors allowed to work, the Daily Star reported.

The last time a full lockdown was imposed in the country was in the beginning of April during the Western Easter holiday. A third lockdown is also expected during Eid Al-Fitr at the end of the holy month of Ramadan currently being observed by Muslims.

Health officials confirmed 1,478 new coronavirus infection cases overnight, raising the country’s caseload to 524,241.

The coronavirus committee also decided to ban travelers coming from India and Brazil from entry into Lebanon, as well as through the country’s land and sea crossings “unless they had been in a third country for a period of at least 14 days.”


Election of new Iraqi president delayed by Kurds

Updated 10 sec ago
Follow

Election of new Iraqi president delayed by Kurds

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s parliament postponed the election of a president on Tuesday to allow Kurdish rivals time to agree on a candidate.
Parliamentary Speaker Haibat Al-Halbussi received requests from Iraq's two main Kurdish parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, to postpone the vote to allow both parties more time to reach a deal.
By convention, a Shi’ite holds the powerful post of prime minister, the parliamentary Speaker is a Sunni and the largely ceremonial presidency goes to a Kurd.
Under a tacit agreement between the two main Kurdish parties, a PUK member holds the Iraqi presidency, while the president and regional premier of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region is selected from the KDP. But this time the KDP has named Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein as its own candidate for the presidency.
Once elected, the president will then have 15 days to appoint a prime minister, widely expected to be Nouri Al-Maliki, who held the post from 2006 to 2014. The shrewd 75-year-old politician is Iraq’s only two-term premier since the 2003 US-led invasion.
The Coordination Framework, an alliance of Shi’ite parties that holds a parliamentary majority, has already endorsed Maliki.