Markets teem as Pakistan’s lockdown eases despite infection surge

Markets teem as Pakistan’s lockdown eases despite infection surge
People shop in a market after the government eased the nationwide lockdown imposed as a preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus, in Karachi on May 11, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 12 May 2020
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Markets teem as Pakistan’s lockdown eases despite infection surge

Markets teem as Pakistan’s lockdown eases despite infection surge
  • Public transport remains shut, but factories and offices have been allowed to resume operations
  • Doctors fear the coronavirus outbreak will gather pace and overwhelm the struggling health system

KARACHI: Markets across Pakistan were teeming on Monday after opening up for the first time in over a month as the country began to lift its lockdown despite a rise in the rate of coronavirus infections.

Pakistan announced last week that it would begin a phased lifting of its lockdown because of the effect it was having on the economy and an impoverished workforce.

Public transport remains shut, but factories and offices have been allowed to resume operations. Restrictions on mosque attendance had already been lifted before last week’s announcement.

“We opened today after almost two months; I am almost bankrupt and owe workers their salaries,” said Muhammad Sattar, a garment shop owner in one of the busiest commercial areas of Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city and financial capital.

Areas around wholesale markets in Karachi saw heavy traffic jams, and there were also big crowds in the commercial centers of the provincial capitals of Lahore and Quetta.

However, there are signs that Pakistan’s outbreak is accelerating. Of its 667 deaths from the coronavirus, around 200 have been registered over the past week, and there are almost 31,000 confirmed infections.

Prime Minister Imran Khan justified easing the lockdown by saying: “We know we’re doing it at a time when our (infection) curve is going up ... but it is not increasing (as fast) as we were expecting.”

But he said the virus could run out of control if people did not take precautions.

Faisal Subzwari, a leader of a political party allied with Khan, tweeted his frustration with many citizens:

“If 99 percent, 95 percent of shopkeepers and buyers are not wearing masks, what’s the point of talking about other precautionary measures?“

Many doctors have said they fear the outbreak will gather pace among a population of more than 210 million and overwhelm the struggling health system.

Markets were also packed in Peshawar, the capital of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, which has registered 245 dead and has the highest mortality rate in the country.

“I opened my shop for the first time today after locking it on March 24,” said Ghousul Azam, adding that he had a family to support. “Better to die of coronavirus, because I can’t survive sitting at home.”

Schools and large shopping malls remain shut for now, and markets will initially be allowed to operate only until 5 p.m.

But with the Muslim holiday of Eid coming in two weeks, crowds are likely to increase.