Egypt

Egypt’s coronavirus infection rate exceeds 1,000 on Saturday: Ministry of Health and Population

Egypt on Saturday confirmed five additional deaths and 85 new coronavirus cases, bringing the country’s number of confirmed total cases so far to 1,070.

Seventy-one people have died from the virus in Egypt. 

The newly infected cases are all Egyptian nationals who returned from abroad or were in contact with previously confirmed cases in Egypt, Health Ministry Spokesperson Khaled Megahed said, adding that the total number of fully-recovered cases rose to 241 on Saturday, all of whom have been discharged from isolation hospitals.

Twenty-five cases left quarantine on Saturday.

The head of the Egyptian Cabinet’s Crisis Management Chamber Mohamed Abdel Maksoud said that once it hits 1,000 infections and Egypt enters into stage three, infection rate will skyrocket compared to stage two. Worse still, infection sources will become untraceable to diagnosed cases.

He blamed the spread of the disease on general ignorance among citizens, especially returnees from abroad who did not follow precautionary measures.

On March 24, Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly imposed a two-week nationwide curfew from seven pm until six am beginning and extended school closures an additional two weeks to fight the spread of coronavirus.

Egypt had already closed mosques and churches across the country, banned shisha at cafes, and asked non-essential stores and shops to close each evening.

Under the curfew announced on Tuesday, shops will be closed from five pm until six am during the week, while stores will be subjected to a complete shutdown on Fridays and Saturdays.

However, the closure decisions do not include bakeries, pharmacies, grocery stores or supermarkets outside shopping centers, Madbouly said, while restaurants will be limited to home delivery only.

Cafes have been shuttered completely.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi also previously announced a LE100 billion comprehensive plan to counter the outbreak and its negative economic consequences, while the Central Bank of Egypt has adopted various measures to cushion the economy as harsh measures are implemented to contain the outbreak.

These include a three percent interest rate cut, providing loans to tourist establishments with repayment terms of up to two years, and an injection of LE20 billion, or $US 1.27 billion, to support the stock market.

 

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