• Doctors say Turkish COVID-19 outbreak worse than reported as hospitalizations swell - NRT Tv

    Doctors in Turkey’s coronavirus hotspots say hospitals are filling up with more cases than are reflected in the official nationwide count, which resurged above 1,000 this week.

    Intensive care units (ICUs) and emergency rooms in hospitals set aside for COVID-19 patients are at capacity in the capital Ankara and the southeastern city of Gaziantep, medics associations from those regions told Reuters this week.

    The government, which lifted a partial lockdown in June to restart the economy, sounded its own warning on Tuesday when the health minister described the 1,083 new COVID-19 cases as a “severe” rise after a four-day holiday weekend.

    In response, authorities rolled out new inspections and enforcement measures, including fines for not wearing masks or maintaining social distancing. New cases had hovered just below 1,000 for more than three weeks, according to official figures.

    But Aysegul Ates Tarla, head of the Gaziantep-Kilis Medics’ Chamber, said a single hospital in the region logged 200 new COVID-19 cases in one day recently, with the infection rate among health workers especially high.

    In Ankara, Ali Karakoc, general secretary of its Medics’ Chamber, said roughly 1,000 people test positive in the capital each day and he blamed what he called a premature easing of lockdown measures in June.

    “Patients are being made to wait on gurneys for hours or are being sent home. Even those who have pneumonia are sent home because they cannot find a place,” he said, adding COVID-dedicated beds were now full.

    The health ministry, which divides cases by regions in daily updates, was not immediately available for comment.

    According to a document seen by Reuters, Ankara’s provincial health authority requested all hospitals set aside 50% of clinic beds and all empty ICU beds for COVID-19, and asked for delays in all elective surgeries and admissions for internal medicine.

    Separately, the authority said 63% of ICU beds in Ankara were occupied while 50% of all hospital beds were occupied. “The pandemic is still under control in our province,” it said.

    IGNORING RULES

    Official figures indicate the new coronavirus has killed 5,765 people and infected 234,934 in Turkey, putting the country 17th globally in a Reuters tally of total cases.

    President Tayyip Erdogan’s government has lobbied hard for countries to allow tourists to visit Turkey again to shore up the economy, and on Tuesday Germany lifted travel warnings for some Turkish regions.

    Health Minister Fahrettin Koca has said the bump in cases is due mainly to individuals ignoring rules.

    In July, he posted a photo on Twitter of tightly packed soccer fans watching a game with the question: “Did everyone hold their breath for 90 minutes?”

    The government said Thursday would mark the most intensive inspections to date of marketplaces, businesses, restaurants and other public areas.

    Karakoc of the Ankara medics group said the government could do more. “If you let people sit side by side on public transportation, if you make them work shoulder to shoulder in factories, people will ignore it when you warn them,” he said.

    In Gaziantep, Ates Tarla said authorities would probably raise the bed capacity in COVID-19 units by 25% to free up space ahead of what she expects will be a jump in infections two weeks after the holiday.

    https://nrttv.com/En/News.aspx?id=22998&MapID=3

    #Covid-19#Turquie#Seconde_vague#Pandémie#Santé#vacances#mobilité#migration

  • Bus, taxis drivers in Erbil protest coronavirus travel ban - NRT Tv

    us and taxi drivers protested at a transportation terminal in Erbil city on Thursday (August 6) calling on the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to re-open routes between Erbil and other areas of the Kurdistan Region and Iraq.

    Gathering at the Erbil-Baghdad Garage, the drivers complained that they had been out of business for more than four months due to the coronavirus travel ban in the Region, noting that their counterparts in Sulaimani had already begun operations to governorates in central and southern Iraq.

    “Our demand is to be treated like the drivers from Sulaimani, Baghdad, Kirkuk, Kifri, Kalar, and Chamchamal,” one of the protesters told an NRT reporter.

    “We are in a region that became three states. The roads have been opened between Sulaimani and Baghdad and there is no problem,” he added, saying that large numbers of tourists from outside the Kurdistan Region had visited Sulaimani over the Eid al-Adha holiday.

    The protesters also argued that it was unfair that restaurants and other businesses are allowed to open, but their industry cannot return to normal.

    According to the KRG’s health ministry, there have been 15,577 cases of coronavirus in the Kurdistan Region and 597 patients have died as of Wednesday night. In Iraq as a whole, there have been 137,556 cases and 5,094 deaths.

    Although Sulaimani has recorded the highest total number of cases in the Kurdistan Region since the beginning of March, in recent weeks Erbil has had the highest number of new cases per day.

    https://nrttv.com/En/News.aspx?id=23011&MapID=1

    #Covid-19#Iraq#KRG#Frontièrerégionale#Seconde_vague#Pandémie#Santé#confinement#migrant#migration

  • COVID-19 case detected at IDP camp in Duhok: migration and displacement ministry- NRT Tv

    The federal Ministry of Displacement and Migration announced on Wednesday (August 5) that it has identified a coronavirus case at the Chamishku camp in Duhok’s Zakho district, the first at that facility.

    The General Director of the ministry’s Branches Affairs Department Ali Abbas said in a statement that the person in question was a 39-year-old internally displaced person (IDP).

    “Thirty of those who were in contact with him have been isolated according to the initial report issued by the competent authorities in the province,” read the statement.

    “With the guidance of Minister of Immigration and Displacement Evan Faeq, immediate measures have been taken to sterilize the camp and prevent entries and exits to limit the spread of the virus,” Abbas added.

    “Necessary measures have been taken in coordination with Duhok Health Department to take samples, transport patients, and isolate the contacts.”

    A request for comment sent to the Kurdistan Regional Government’s (KRG) Joint Crisis Coordination Centre (JCC) was not immediately returned.

    Located just north of Zakho city, Chamishku is home to 26,520 IDPs, according to UNHCR.

    Since the beginning of the Kurdistan Region’s coronavirus outbreak in March, Duhok has been relatively free of the virus, but cases have increased significantly in the past two week, surging from 357 cases on July 21 to 801 on Tuesday.

    For many, the nightmare scenario is that the coronavirus outbreak spreads to the displacement camps, where social distancing and other public health measures are difficult to achieve

    https://nrttv.com/En/News.aspx?id=22999&MapID=1

    #Covid-19#Iraq#KRG#Dohuk#Seconde_vague#Camps#déplacés#Pandémie#Santé#migrant#migration

  • Sulaimani extends closure of government offices until July 4 due to coronavirus outbreak - NRT
    Sulaimani governorate’s Supreme Committee for Coronavirus Response said on Saturday (June 27) that the suspension of operations at most government offices will be extended until July 4.

    #Covid-19#Iraq#KRG#Sulaimani#Seconde_vague#confinement#Pandémie#Santé#migrant#migration.

    https://nrttv.com/En/News.aspx?id=22129&MapID=1

  • Two coronavirus patients recover in Duhok : directorate - NRT

    Duhok Health Directorate said on Tuesday (June 2) that two patients in the governorate have recovered from COVID-19, the disease caused by coronavirus infection.

    Twenty-one of the governorate’s 39 coronavirus patients have now recovered from the disease and been sent home.

    According to health ministry, 745 patients have tested positive for the virus in the Kurdistan Region since the beginning of the outbreak. Four hundred and twenty-two patients have recovered from COVID-19 and eight have died from it.

    #Covid-19#Iraq#KRG#Chiffre_officiel#Seconde_vague#Pandémie#Santé#confinement#migrant#migration

    https://nrttv.com/En/News.aspx?id=21662&MapID=1

  • Protests by shop owners angry at renewed coronavirus curfew resume for second day - NRT

    Shop owners and workers in several cities in the Kurdistan Region protested on Tuesday (June 2) against the government’s decision to reimplement a coronavirus curfew, saying it was causing severe damage to their livelihoods.

    The protests are indicative of the bind in which the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) finds itself: on the one hand, it is working to mitigate the public health effects of a deadly outbreak that has spread quickly over the last three weeks, but on the other hand it does not have the financial means to provide basic needs for residents who rely on a daily income to survive.

    #Covid-19#Iraq#KRG#Commercant#Economie#Seconde_vague#Pandémie#Santé#confinement#migrant#migration

    https://nrttv.com/En/News.aspx?id=21665&MapID=1

  • Iran risks second coronavirus wave if people ignore restrictions: minister - NRT

    The Islamic Republic, one of the worst-hit countries in the region, started easing its lockdown in April after a drop in deaths.

    But May saw an uptick in the rate of reported infections compared with mid to late April - an acceleration the government put down to increased testing.

    “The outbreak is not over yet and at any moment it may come back stronger than before,” Saeed Namaki said in a news conference broadcast on state TV.

    “If our people fail to respect the health protocols ... we must prepare ourselves for the worst situation.”

    Iran has reported a total of 154,445 infections as of Monday, an increase of 2,979 from the previous day.

    #Covid-19#Iran#Seconde_vague#Pandémie#Santé#migrant#migration

    https://nrttv.com/En/News.aspx?id=21638&MapID=3