RIYADH: Saudi Arabia yesterday imposed a 24-hour curfew in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, extending measures to combat coronavirus, while other Gulf states locked down districts with large migrant worker populations.
The Saudi interior ministry stipulated exceptions, including for essential workers and to allow residents to buy food and access medical care. Cars may only carry one passenger.
Saudi Arabia has recorded 1,885 infections and 21 deaths, the most in the GCC.
It has already halted international flights, suspended the year-round umrah pilgrimage, closed most public places, and heavily restricted internal movement.
The eastern province of Qatif, where the kingdom’s first coronavirus cases were reported among pilgrims returning from Iran, has been on lockdown for nearly four weeks.
Entry and exit to Riyadh, Mecca, Medina and Jeddah is limited. Some neighbourhoods in Mecca and Medina were already under full lockdown, but in the rest of those cities the curfew was previously from 3pm to 6am.
In other Gulf states, lockdowns targeted neighbourhoods with large numbers of low-wage foreign labourers.
Kuwait’s health minister said authorities were considering sealing off some areas after Qatar announced late on Wednesday it was extending a lockdown on an industrial area and Oman closed off Muttrah, home to one of the sultanate’s oldest markets.
Dubai on Tuesday sealed off Al Ras, an area famous for its gold and spice suqs and where many migrant workers reside.
Millions of migrant workers, mainly from Asian countries like Nepal, India and the Philippines, are among the large expatriate population in the six Gulf states, where confirmed infections have risen to above 4,700, with 36 deaths.
Oman’s health minister said the coastal commercial district of Muttrah was sealed off due to the discovery of a community spread of the virus. “Such decisions are not easily taken ... but it is for the public good,” state media quoted him as saying.
Saudi Arabia said on Wednesday it was working to enable foreign residents to return home even as passenger flights remain suspended.