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Myanmar Locks Down Biggest City as Cases Soar Ahead of Vote

Myanmar Locks Down Biggest City as Cases Soar Ahead of Elections

Myanmar locked down most of Yangon province, home to its largest city, for two weeks to contain a record surge in coronavirus infections ahead of the general elections scheduled for November.

The strict stay-at-home order from Monday bars more than one member of a family venturing out for shopping and curbs travel from Yangon township to other cities except for essential work, according to guidelines issued Sunday by the nation’s Central Committee on Covid-19 Control. Essential services such as banking, healthcare, fuel stations and food outlets will be allowed to operate as usual, it said.

Myanmar Locks Down Biggest City as Cases Soar Ahead of Vote

While private sector companies and organizations were ordered to ask employees to work from home, government employees were allowed to do so on rotation. With new virus cases surging, authorities cut the quarantine period at state facilities to one week from two to make space for the care of primary and secondary contacts of infected people, according to the Ministry of Health and Sports.

Myanmar Locks Down Biggest City as Cases Soar Ahead of Vote

New cases jumped by 671 on Sunday, a single-day record for Myanmar since the nation of 54-million people first reported the virus outbreak in late March, official data showed. The death toll has jumped to 97 from only six a month ago. Much of Yangon and Rakhine State, the epicenters of the nation’s outbreak, was already under some kind of social distancing rules with a ban on domestic travel imposed from Sept. 10.

Yangon region, which accounted for about a quarter of Myanmar’s gross domestic product and 30% of total investments, is home to the Thilawa Special Economic Zone and 29 industrial zones, according to the Ministry of Investment and Foreign Economic Relations.

Myanmar is racing to contain the outbreak, with 5,805 Covid-19 cases as of Monday morning, ahead of a general elections scheduled for Nov. 8. About two dozen political parties are calling for the vote to be postponed due to the resurgence in virus cases. But the ruling National League for Democracy still favors going to vote on schedule, with State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi saying the outbreak can be contained with strict social distancing curbs.

Other highlights of the lockdown orders are:

  • No visitor allowed in streets except those with prior approval by township authorities
  • Vehicles must not carry more than two people
  • All factories including cutting, making & packing businesses must close from Sept. 24 to Oct. 7
  • All people under quarantine are subject to a mandatory one-week home isolation after testing negative

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.