BANGKOK, April 26 — Thailand’s prime minister was fined for not wearing a mask today after new Covid-19 restrictions came into force to try to halt the country’s spiralling outbreak.

Wearing masks is now compulsory in public spaces in 49 provinces and the capital, Bangkok—where the latest outbreak has been traced back to a nightlife district.

Some locations are backing it up with a 20,000 baht (RM2,615) fine.

After a picture of a maskless Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha attending a meeting emerged on social media Monday, the Bangkok governor said the premier had been fined 6,000 baht.

Advertisement

“As Bangkok governor, I filed a complaint against the prime minister who accepted the fine,” Governor Aswin Kwanmuang wrote on Facebook.

Some 2,048 new cases were announced today. The day before, Thailand recorded its highest single-day death toll of the pandemic, with 11 fatalities.

Until the latest outbreak, Thailand had managed to keep infections down thanks to strict travel restrictions and swift action to isolate confirmed cases.

Advertisement

But there have been complaints about the slow rollout of vaccines, with the kingdom lagging behind other countries in the region.

“It’s a failure in management from the health ministry,” said 61-year-old restaurant manager Pracha, who gave his first name only.

Prime Minister Prayut said on Facebook the government was trying to source more doses and ramp up the programme to inoculate 300,000 people a day.

In addition to the mask requirement, authorities in the capital have closed a raft of venues including cinemas, parks, gyms, swimming pools, spas and nurseries.

The new restrictions come a week after bars and nightclubs were ordered closed and restaurants banned from serving alcohol.

Pranee Namrat, a 48-year-old seafood vendor, told AFP she was frightened the situation would get worse.

“If I got infected... I’m scared of not having a place for treatment,” she said.

Outbreaks in Cambodia, Laos 

In neighbouring Cambodia, also in the grip of a new coronavirus wave, the World Health Organisation (WHO) urged factory owners in the key garment sector to help protect workers.

“The current outbreaks in factories and markets serve as a painful reminder of the importance of investing in mitigation measures before cases occur,” Li Ailan, the WHO representative in Cambodia, said in a statement.

Li urged factory owners to do more temperature screening and rearrange workshops to allow social distancing.

The capital Phnom Penh has been under lockdown for 12 days and last week the authorities ordered all wet markets in the city to close for two weeks.

Prime Minister Hun Sen on Sunday ordered tougher enforcement of lockdown measures.

Around 1.3 million Cambodians have received at least one dose of the vaccine. The country, which has a population of 16 million, is using China’s Sinopharm and Sinovac vaccines as well as AstraZeneca.

Today, Hun Sen appealed to countries “not to hoard the vaccine more than needed as well as not to use the vaccine as a political tool”.

Cambodia has reported 10,555 cases in total and 79 deaths including 10 on Saturday—a single-day record for the country.

Neighbouring Laos—which appeared to escape the brunt of the pandemic last year—is also undergoing a surge, jumping from 58 cases to 323 in less than a week.

Its capital Vientiane was placed under a snap lockdown last week, with authorities prohibiting residents from leaving their homes except for groceries and going to the hospital. — AFP