You are here
Morocco reimposes Tangiers lockdown after virus spike
By AFP - Jul 13,2020 - Last updated at Jul 13,2020
A man confined at home watches as a Moroccan municipal worker disinfects his street in the southern port city of Safi on June 9, during a total lockdown (AFP photo)
RABAT — Morocco on Monday announced a return to lockdown measures in the northern port city of Tangiers to smother a new outbreak of the novel coronavirus, weeks after easing nationwide restrictions.
The city of about a million inhabitants was locked down from Monday at noon local time, with public transport suspended, cafes and public spaces closed and movement restricted.
Residents are only allowed to leave their homes “in cases of extreme necessity”, the interior ministry said in a statement, adding that “exceptional authorisation from local authorities” would be required for movement within or beyond the city.
Authorities decided to reimpose the measures to “prevent the spread of the virus” after “new infection clusters” appeared, it said.
The northern city, within sight of the Spanish coast on a clear day, has a vast port and is a key economic hub linking Africa with Europe and beyond.
Morocco had imposed strict nationwide lockdown measures after recording its first COVID-19 cases in March.
It began easing them in June and has since reopened cafes and restaurants, allowing domestic visitors to restart its vital tourism sector.
Its borders remain closed until further notice, except to Moroccans and residents abroad, who will be able to return from Tuesday onwards.
But despite masks being mandatory in public, new localised outbreaks of the disease have forced the shutdown of several cities.
An outbreak at a fish canning factory prompted authorities to lock down Safi, a town of 300,000 on the Atlantic coast, in early July.
The kingdom, with a population of 34 million, has recorded over 15,000 infections including 253 deaths.
Related Articles
DJERBA, Tunisia — Tourists are back on Tunisia's beaches after charter flights resumed to the North African country following a break
TANGIERS, Morocco — Abdelwahed sat outside a vast port on the northern tip of Morocco, looking out for trucks heading towards Spain.
GENEVA — The World Health Organisation warned Monday that there could be no return to normality any time soon as too many countries were bun