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News ID: 89086
Publish Date : 12 April 2021 - 21:30

Turkey Set to Tighten COVID-19 Curbs Again After Surge: Source

ANKARA (Reuters) – Turkey’s daily coronavirus infection numbers have soared above 50,000 and President Tayyip Erdogan is likely to order a tightening of restrictions this week ahead of the vital tourism season, a senior government official said.
Turkey ranks fourth globally in new case numbers, which peaked near 56,000 last week - a five-fold jump from early March, when Erdogan loosened social curbs in what he called a period of "controlled normalization”.
Ankara has blamed lax public adherence to rules and virus variants for the surge, and on March 29 it announced weekend lockdowns and closed restaurant dining for Ramadan, the Islamic fasting month that starts on Tuesday.
But the official told Reuters the short-lived normalization period did not go well and measures were set to be tightened even more after a cabinet meeting scheduled for Tuesday.
"There does not appear to be a solution other than taking much harsher measures,” the person said. Erdogan’s cabinet will act on proposals made by a government science board, the official added, requesting anonymity.
The official said steps may include limiting intercity travel, which doctors say is key to transmission, restricting movement of those under 20 and over 65 years, and closing sports and leisure facilities.
Separate sources on the 38-member science board said some wanted a complete lockdown throughout Ramadan or failing that, restrictions on movement between cities and reductions in public transport use within cities by adjusting work shifts.
"The plan is to lower case numbers before the tourism season fully begins, because daily case numbers above 50,000 will impact tourism in a seriously negative way,” the official said.
Last year the pandemic slashed Turkey’s tourism revenues - a major source of foreign currency to curb its chronically high current account deficits - by two-thirds to $12 billion.