
President Mnangagwa
Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa said Saturday the lockdown imposed to control the spread of coronavirus would stay in place for the moment, but would be reviewed every two weeks.
The restrictions have so far borne fruit as transmission has not been widespread and numbers remain lower than had been initial projections, he added.
From more than 25,000 tests conducted, the country has so far detected 42 cases, four of which proved fatal.
Mnangagwa said the World Health Organisation had classified coronavirus transmission in Zimbabwe as “sporadic, with one or more cases imported or locally detected.
“This may suggest that despite the small numbers tested, our country might have a reduced COVID-19 trajectory,” he said in a speech broadcast on public television.
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Other, similar sub-Saharan countries had recorded similar trajectories, he added.
“Zimbabwe will, therefore, continue on … lockdown for an indefinite period. We shall have two-week interval reviews to assess progress, or lack of it.”
Zimbabwe imposed its lockdown on March 30.
Local doctors have warned that Zimbabwe’s poorly equipped health service could not cope with a coronavirus pandemic.
Zimbabwe’s President had earlier announced that the lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic will be extended by two weeks.
But mining and manufacturing operations will be exempted – to keep the economy running.
[AFP]
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