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Myanmar locks down Rakhine state capital after outbreak of more infectious COVID-19 strain

Myanmar locks down Rakhine state capital after outbreak of more infectious COVID-19 strain

Residents at a temporary refugee camp at a monastery in Sittwe, Rakhine State on Jun 29, 2020. (Photo: AFP)

YANGON: Myanmar has locked down the state capital of conflict-torn Rakhine state after an outbreak of a coronavirus strain that officials said was more infectious than that previously seen in the country.

Nineteen people have tested positive for the virus in the western region since Monday, health officials said on Friday (Aug 21), the first local transmission in Myanmar in months, bringing the total number of cases to 409.

READ: Myanmar reports first COVID-19 death; man had 4-day layover in Singapore

Myat Htut Nyunt, deputy director at Myanmar's department of medical research, said the type of virus was the same as a mutation detected earlier this week in Malaysia, which has been found in Europe, North America, and parts of Asia and is thought to be more infectious.

"So we would like to inform the people that this kind of virus has a faster rate of transmission," the official said.

The vast majority of the recent cases have been in the town of Sittwe, where officials have issued a stay-at-home order and imposed a curfew. 

Domestic airlines have suspended services between Sittwe and the commercial capital of Yangon.

Tens of thousands of people are living in displacement camps across Rakhine due to fighting between government troops and ethnic insurgents.

READ: Thousands in Myanmar's Rakhine state flee as army plans operations, monitors say

READ: Timeline: Three years on, a look at the Rohingya crisis

Sittwe is also home to camps where about 100,000 Rohingya Muslims have been confined since an outbreak of violence in 2012. Rohingya are mostly denied citizenship and face strict curbs on freedom of movement and access to healthcare.

Kyaw Hla, a community leader in one camp, said government staff had visited on Friday but conditions there were too poor to follow advice on social distancing and hygiene.

"It's not OK to live here, in a small space with many people. We have always had concerns in the camp, COVID-19 or other issues. Families live in 8 foot by 10 foot or 8 foot by 14 foot rooms. Things are not going to get better."

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Source: Reuters/ad

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