Serbia calls state of emergency to counter coronavirus


Reuters | Belgrade | Updated: 16-03-2020 02:53 IST | Created: 16-03-2020 01:32 IST
Serbia calls state of emergency to counter coronavirus
Representative image Image Credit: ANI
  • Country:
  • Serbia

Serbia has introduced a state of emergency to halt the spread of coronavirus, its President Aleksandar Vucic said on Sunday after meeting the country's top government and health officials in Belgrade.

Vucic said he was acting in line with legal provisions that allow him to declare a state of emergency in the absence of a sitting parliament, which was disbanded ahead of April 26 general elections. "From this very moment we have a state of emergency," Vucic said in a televised address, adding that the government will formulate the "harshest measures" soon.

He said that the fight "against an invisible adversary" will be aimed at the protection of the elderly, who are particularly at risk from the coronavirus outbreak. Serbia's president said kindergartens, schools, and universities will be closed until the end of the semester.

Health authorities in the Balkan country have so far reported 46 cases of infection and tested 283 people. There have been no fatalities, but two patients remain in serious condition. Vucic warned that from Monday the military will be guarding hospitals, while police will be monitoring those quarantined or in self-isolation for up to 28 days. Those who violate quarantine may face jail terms of up to three years, he said.

"There will be limitations of all sorts," he said. Serbia has already banned indoor gatherings of more than 50 people and has closed the country's borders to nationals of a number of countries including Italy, Iran, parts of China, South Korea and Switzerland.

Many Serbians who live and work in the European Union flocked home over the weekend, although Vucic requested they avoid traveling to Serbia. Hundreds of cars created gridlock at the border with Hungary on Sunday where they remained stranded for hours, awaiting entry permits from Serbia's health authorities.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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