More than
30,000 people have tested positive for Covid-19 in the tiny Gulf country — 1.1 percent
of the 2.75 million population — although just 15 people have died.
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| In this file photo taken on March 16, 2020 A man wearing a mask as a precaution against Covid-19 coronavirus disease, walks along the Doha corniche in the Qatari capital. (AFP) |
Qatar on Sunday began enforcing the world's toughest penalties of up to three years' imprisonment for failing to wear masks in public, as it battles one of the world's highest coronavirus infection rates.
More than
30,000 people have tested positive for Covid-19 in the tiny Gulf country — 1.1
percent of the 2.75 million population — although just 15 people have died.
Only the
micro-states of San Marino and the Vatican had higher per capita infection
rates, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.
Violators
of Qatar's new rules will face up to three years in jail and fines of as much
as $55,000.
Drivers
alone in their vehicles are exempt from the requirement, but several expats
told AFP that police were stopping cars at checkpoints to warn them of the new
rules before they came into force.
Wearing a
mask is currently mandatory in around 50 countries, although scientists are
divided on their effectiveness.
Authorities
in Chad have made it an offence to be unmasked in public, on pain of 15 days in
prison. In Morocco similar rules can see violators jailed for three months and
fined up to $130.
Qatari
authorities have warned that gatherings during the Muslim fasting month of
Ramadan may have increased infections.
Abdullatif
al-Khal, co-chair of Qatar's National Pandemic Preparedness Committee, said
Thursday that there was "a huge risk in gatherings of families" for
Ramadan meals.
"(They)
led to a significant increase in the number of infections among Qataris,"
he said.
Neighbouring
Saudi Arabia will enforce a round-the-clock nationwide curfew during the
five-day Eid al Fitr holiday later this month to fight the coronavirus.
Labourers
at risk
Mosques,
along with schools, malls, and restaurants remain closed in Qatar to prevent
the disease's spread.
But
construction sites remain open as Qatar prepares to host the 2022 World Cup,
although foremen and government inspectors are attempting to enforce social
distancing rules.
Officials
have said workers at three stadiums have tested positive for the highly
contagious respiratory virus. Masks have been compulsory for construction
workers since April 26.
Tens of
thousands of migrant labourers were quarantined in Doha's gritty Industrial
Area after a number of infections were confirmed there in mid-March, but
authorities have begun to ease restrictions.
Khal said
that most new cases were among migrant workers, although there has been a jump
in infections among Qataris. He said the country had not yet reached the peak
of its contagion.
Rights
groups have warned that Gulf labourers' cramped living conditions, communal
food preparation areas and shared bathrooms could undermine social distancing
efforts and speed up the spread of the virus.

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