Saudi Arabia Asks People to Obey Healthcare Measures as Coronavirus Cases Rise

The deadly virus outbreak has created a major stir around the world in recent times infecting more than 7.7 million people globally

Saudi Arabia asked the people to comply with the health measures for preventing the spread of the coronavirus or COVID-19 on Sunday, as the daily tally of the cases rose over 4,000 for the first time.

The health ministry of Saudi Arabia confirmed 4,233 new cases of coronavirus taking the total to 127,541 along with 972 deaths, which is the highest among six of the Gulf countries.

Saudi Arabia, which has a population of some 30 million, allowed employees to return to offices, commercial centers to reopen and prayers at mosques to resume in a three-phase plan which began last month. A curfew is due to end by June 21. "There are two paths before us. The average infection rate could rise if people continue not to comply, or we could bring the rate back down," a health ministry spokesman said. The move follows a similar warning from Iran.

Saudi Asks People to Obey Health Measures to Prevent COVID-19

lab test
Lab test (Representational picture) Pixabay

President Hassan Rouhani said on Saturday that Iran will reimpose restrictions to stem a surge in coronavirus cases if health regulations are not observed. After gradually relaxing its lockdown, Iran has seen a sharp rise of new infections.

Saudi authorities re-imposed curfew hours in the Red Sea port city of Jeddah on June 5 and suspended work at offices for two weeks as the number of infections there increased. "We will intervene or apply additional measures in any region that requires that," the ministry spokesman said during a virtual news briefing.

The Saudi capital Riyadh recorded the biggest spike in the last 24 hours, with 1,735 more infections, followed by Jeddah and the holy city of Mecca with more than 300 each. The total number of cases in the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries is more than 326,760, with some 1,770 deaths, Reuters calculations show.

(With agency inputs)

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