Stepping up measures against a second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, Turkey on Monday introduced new restrictions, including a curfew on weeknights and a full weekend curfew.
WEEKEND-LONG CURFEW
“A general curfew will be applied every weeknight from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m.,” President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan told the public following a Cabinet meeting at the presidential complex in the capital Ankara.
There will also be a weekend-long curfew, from Friday 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. Monday, he added.
Some sectors, including production, supply, health, and agriculture, will be exempt from the curfews, Erdoğan said. He added that some shops that provide home delivery service, such as markets and butchers, will also be excluded from the weekend restrictions.
65+ BARRED FROM USING PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
In addition, people 20 and younger as well as those 65 and older are barred from using public transportation, he said, adding that restaurants will operate on a delivery-only basis.
He said kindergartens and similar educational institutions will be suspended, a step already announced over the weekend for Istanbul and the capital Ankara.
Funeral prayers will be performed with a maximum of 30 people, including relatives of the deceased, and weddings will also not exceed this number.
Places such as Turkish baths, saunas, massage salons, swimming pools, and amusement parks will also halt activities.
NEW YEAR CELEBRATIONS WILL NOT BE ALLOWED
Erdoğan also announced that everyone will be required to present their individual electronic HES codes to show their infection status – available through a free smartphone app – when entering shopping centers.
House gatherings, including New Year’s Eve celebrations, will not be allowed, as part of the newly announced measures.
Erdoğan reiterated his call on the public to quit smoking for the sake of their own health, taking the circumstances of the pandemic as an opportunity to do so. The Turkish president said the new restrictions will go into effect as of Tuesday.
Noting the rapid surge in the number of coronavirus patients in Turkey, Erdoğan urged the public to be much more cautious and patient as the country battles the pandemic. He also said the government is well-aware of the drawbacks that coronavirus measures bring and stressed efforts to minimize this.
VACCINATIONS WILL FIRST BE GIVEN TO HEALTHCARE WORKERS
“There is no choice but to minimize human mobility to reduce the negative impact of the pandemic,” he added. Erdoğan said with the arrival of fall and winter, cold and flu cases are also on the rise, adding to the burden on the healthcare system.
“The lower we can keep hospital occupancy rates, the safer we will feel in combatting the epidemic,” he said.
Mentioning how Turkey inked an agreement with China to purchase 50 million vaccine doses, Erdoğan said in the coming months vaccinations will first be given to healthcare workers. He said the vaccine will be free of charge for everyone.