Coronavirus detected inside Gaza for 1st time, leading to lockdown - Action News
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Coronavirus detected inside Gaza for 1st time, leading to lockdown

A lockdown took hold in Gaza on Tuesday after confirmation of the first cases of COVID-19 in the general population of the Palestinian enclave, whose restricted borders have spared it from wide infection.

Previous cases in the territory had been detected at the border, leading to quarantine

Palestinians line up Tuesday as they wait to buy bread outside a bakery in Gaza. A lockdown has been enacted, as conditions in the crowded territory could otherwise lead to a dangerous spike in coronavirus cases. (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)

A lockdown took hold in Gaza on Tuesday after confirmation of the first cases of COVID-19 in the general population of the Palestinian enclave, whose restricted borders have spared it from wide infection.

Health authorities in the HamasIslamist-run territory of two million people are concerned over the potentially disastrous combination of poverty, densely populated refugee camps and limited hospital facilities in dealing with an outbreak.

A government spokesperson said four cases of the coronavirus were confirmed in a single family in a refugee camp, the first in Gaza that did not involve people quarantined in border facilities after crossing into the coastal enclave from Egypt and Israel.

Citing security concerns, both Egypt and Israel maintain tight restrictions at the Gaza frontier, leaving Gazans with little access to the outside world for years and hospitals often complaining of shortages in medical supplies.

"What happens if one of us gets infected?" asked Khaled Sami, a Gaza resident. "When people are seriously ill, they send them into Israel, the West Bank or Egypt. Everything is closed now and who is going to open the gate for someone suffering from the coronavirus?"

A Palestinian man sits in an empty stall at the closed-down Fras market amid a two-day lockdown in Gaza due to the detection of first cases of COVID-19 in the general population. (Mahmud Hams/AFP via Getty Images)

With businesses, schools and mosques ordered shuttered late on Monday for at least 48 hours, Gaza's streets were largely deserted. But some people scrambled to buy essentials in groceries and bakeries, a limited number of which were open.

"I hope the whole world can now help Gaza. We can't resolve this issue on our own," said another Gaza resident, who asked to be identified only as Abu Ahmed.

Cases apparently brought from West Bank

Despite the lockdown, hundreds attended the funeral of four Islamic Jihad gunmen who died in an explosion in Gaza on Monday. The cause of the blast was not immediately disclosed.

But in many places, only the sounds of home generators, used to make up for power cuts that can stretch up to 20 hours a day, could be heard.

The health crisis came amid heightened tensions fuelled by the launching of sporadic rocket attacks and incendiary balloons at Israel, which has responded with airstrikes against Hamas positions.

Gaza's health ministry said the four COVID-19 cases were uncovered after a woman travelled to the West Bank.

The ministry said there have been 110 cases of the coronavirus inside border quarantine facilities and one death since the world pandemic began.

Last month, the Gaza director of the World Health Organization, Abdelnaser Soboh, said the territory's health system could deal with only 500 positive cases at one time.