NE NEWS SERVICE
COLOMBO, APRIL 25
The Sri Lankan Navy has quarantined nearly about 4000 of its personnel and their families attached to its major Naval facility after 60 personnel of its forces tested positive in two days, reports media.
The move came as 30 Navy personnel tested positive for the COVID-19 virus each on Friday and Saturday at the country’s Welisara Naval camp, the state-run Daily News reported.
“Today 30 Navy personnel have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus. Another 30 had tested positive for the virus yesterday,” Army Commander Lieutenant General Shavendra Silva was quoted as saying by the paper during his media briefing of the National Operation Centre for the Prevention of COVID-19 here.
Following this information of new cases, nearly 4,000 naval personnel and their families at the naval base have been isolated within the camp, the paper reported, citing an order issued by the Sri Lankan Navy.
The spurt in new cases came amidst Sri Lanka deciding to lift the nationwide curfew imposed to stem the spread of the coronavirus on Monday.
Sri Lanka has been under a strict curfew since March 20 to combat the COVID-19 that has claimed seven lives and infected 420 people.
The government had on Monday dropped its decision to relax the nationwide curfew and extended it to April 27 following a sudden spike in the number of COVID-19 cases.
However, there has been intermittent lifting of the curfew in selected areas which were not seen as dangerous for the spread of the deadly virus.
The Sri Lankan government has planned various measures to protect the security forces personnel from contracting the COVID-19 infection while engaged in operations to control the spread of the disease, the Colombo Page reported.
“All naval personnel are restricted from travel and confined to barracks without leave. They are only allowed to leave the bases for assigned duties,” the report said.
The COVID-19 has so far infected more than 2.7 million people and killed over 190,000 globally. The US is the worst hit with over 51,000 deaths and more than 905,000 cases, according to Johns Hopkins University.
In Sri Lanka, the deadly virus claimed the lives of 7 people so far with 420 cases of confirmed infection.