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Turkish virus cases surge past Iran, then China

An empty road leading to Istanbul Airport, Sunday, April 19, 2020, on the second day of the two-day curfew declared by Turkey's government in an attempt to control the spread of coronavirus. (AP)
An empty road leading to Istanbul Airport, Sunday, April 19, 2020, on the second day of the two-day curfew declared by Turkey's government in an attempt to control the spread of coronavirus. (AP)
A nurse helps a coronavirus patient at a hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. (Reuters)
A nurse helps a coronavirus patient at a hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. (Reuters)
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20 Apr 2020 02:04:30 GMT9
20 Apr 2020 02:04:30 GMT9

Arab News

ANKARA: The number of coronavirus cases in Turkey rose to 86,306 on Tuesday, overtaking China only a day after it overtook Iran.

Turkey reported its first coronavirus patient as recently as March 10.

It now has the highest total outside Europe and the US, and is the worst-affected country in the Middle East and the seventh-worst in the world.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said 127 more people had died, taking the death toll to 2,017.

Last weekend 31 cities including the capital Ankara and Istanbul were under lockdown for a second time, after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said all-day weekend curfews would continue as long as they were necessary.

The first curfew was introduced at two hours’ notice, prompting widespread anger.

Political analysts told Arab News the pandemic had exposed faultlines between Erdogan’s government and municipal authorities.

“The victories of the opposition-run municipalities in Turkey during the March 2019 elections should not be forgotten,” said Nezih Onur Kuru of Koc University in Istanbul.

“People voted strongly for opposition candidates in these municipalities due to the feeling of being unjustly treated. This is the same for the ongoing frictions in managing the social impact of the pandemic.”

Friction between the opposition and government was endangering relief measures at the expense of citizens, he said.

Erdogan's response

Treatment and medicine for COVID-19 patients, as well as protective gear and testing, have become free of charge in public hospitals and medical centers.

Travel restrictions in and out of 31 cities have been extended for another 15 days. All public gatherings are banned in the country. All schools and universities are closed, and all international flights are suspended.

People under the age of 20 and above the age of 65 have not been allowed to leave their homes for a while. The government imposed a two-day curfew for the second consecutive weekend and only state officials, journalists and logistics employees were exempt.

Turkey’s Ministry of Interior banned the opposition-run Mersin municipality in the south from distributing free bread to people, even though the city is one of 31 municipalities under lockdown due to the coronavirus contagion risk.

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) criticized such municipalities for creating a parallel structure.

“These municipalities act in a socially sensitive way,” Sengul Hablemitoglu, a social services expert from the European University of Lefke, told Arab News. “It cannot be seen as a rivalry against the government.”

A country-wide lockdown is not expected for the time being because of government concerns about the economy. But main opposition parties want tougher measures to contain the spread of the disease.

Different story

A group of 13 countries including Canada, Brazil, Turkey, Italy, and Germany used a joint statement to call for global cooperation against the devastating economic impact of the pandemic.

It urged working with all countries to coordinate on public health, travel, trade, economic and financial measures in order to “minimize disruptions and recover stronger.”

The Turkish government is expected to borrow more and print more money or rescue some critical companies amid the economic shock that has hit sectors hard, especially tourism, food and beverage, transport and export-dependent industries. It is set, for the first time, to give its sovereign wealth fund a green light to buy some strategic private firms in distress.

The Turkish Central Bank is also holding talks with its foreign counterparts on swap lines to tackle the economic costs of the quarantine restrictions.

Political analyst Nezih Onur Kuru, from Koc University in Istanbul, said world leaders who prioritized cooperation benefited from increased approval ratings. It was a different story in Turkey, however.

“In Turkey the divergence between the ruling government and some municipalities have triggered political fault lines,” he told Arab News. “The victories of the opposition-run municipalities in Turkey during the March 2019 elections should not be forgotten, as people fervently voted for opposition candidates in these municipalities due to the feeling of being unjustly treated. This is the same for the ongoing frictions in managing the social impact of the pandemic.”

Istanbul has an increasing number of confirmed coronavirus cases, prompting Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu to call for a city-wide lockdown.

Imamoglu, who is from the main opposition Republican People’s Party, defeated his AKP rival twice last year in mayoral races. Once in the poll and then again in a re-run. It was considered to be a significant warning from the city’s electorate, who felt dissatisfied with previous AKP-affiliated administrations.

Kuru added that the friction between the opposition and government was endangering relief measures at the expense of citizens.

Meanwhile a mobile tracking app, designed by the Turkish Health Ministry and cellphone operators that is accessible through the Google Play Store, has raised concerns that it may abuse people’s personal data. It sends automated messages to people diagnosed with the virus and gives the option to track people’s movements on the map.

The next two weeks may see virus cases peak in Turkey.

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