Residents of Turkey will be required to stay mostly at home under a nationwide "full lockdown" starting in the country on April 29 and lasting until May 17.
Citing Turkey’s Health Ministry, Reuters said on April 26 that Turkey logged 37,312 new COVID-19 infections and 353 deaths in the last 24 hours, sharply down from mid-April but still the world's fourth highest number of cases and the worst on a per-capita basis among major nations.
Announcing the new measures after a cabinet meeting, President Tayyip Erdogan said all intercity travel would require official approval, all schools would shut and move lessons online, and a strict capacity limit would be imposed for users of public transport.
Turks will have to stay indoors except for essential shopping trips and urgent medical treatment. Certain groups including emergency service workers and employees in the food and manufacturing sectors will be exempt.
The new restrictions reportedly take effect from 1600 GMT on April 29 and will end at 0200 GMT on May 17.
“At a time when Europe is entering a phase of reopening, we need to rapidly cut our case numbers to below 5,000 not to be left behind. Otherwise we will inevitably face heavy costs in every area, from tourism to trade and education," Erdogan said.
The measures will be implemented "in the strictest manner to ensure they yield the results we seek", he said.
Two weeks ago Turkey announced a night-time curfew from 7 p.m. till 5 a.m. on weekdays, as well as full weekend lockdowns, after cases surged to record levels, but the measures proved insufficient to bring the pandemic under control.
Total daily cases in Turkey peaked above 63,000 on April 16 before dropping sharply to below 39,000 on Sunday, according to Reuters.
The total death toll in Turkey, a nation of 84 million, stood at 38,711 on Monday, the health ministry data showed.
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