Expatriate returning from Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon arrive to be re-tested at a Kuwaiti health ministry containment and screening zone for Covid-19 coronavirus disease in Kuwait City on March 16, 2020. AFP
Expatriate returning from Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon arrive to be re-tested at a Kuwaiti health ministry containment and screening zone for Covid-19 coronavirus disease in Kuwait City on March 16, 2020. AFP
Expatriate returning from Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon arrive to be re-tested at a Kuwaiti health ministry containment and screening zone for Covid-19 coronavirus disease in Kuwait City on March 16, 2020. AFP
Expatriate returning from Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon arrive to be re-tested at a Kuwaiti health ministry containment and screening zone for Covid-19 coronavirus disease in Kuwait City on March 16, 2020

Bahrain repatriates 1,200 nationals stranded after coronavirus lockdowns


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More than 1,200 Bahraini nationals stranded overseas due to flight cancellations brought in to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus have been flown home, the government said on Tuesday.

Undersecretary at the Foreign Ministry Sheikha Rana Al Khalifa said the National Taskforce for Combating Covid-19 had overseen the operation to repatriate the stranded Bahrainis.

She said that they returned people stuck in China first and then nationals in Iran, Iraq, Morocco, Jordan and other GCC nations after embassies around the world tracked down nationals and organised the operation.

As well as returning nationals, Sheikha Rana highlighted how the Jafferi Endowments Directorate had helped find new accommodation for 140 Bahrainis kicked out of their hotel in the Iranian city of Mashhad.

The kingdom's task force is overseen by Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad and was established to co-ordinate the nationwide response. Bahrain has earned praise from the World Health Organisation and international experts for its swift tracking and tracing measures to prevent the spread of the virus in the country.

Coronavirus around the Middle East 

  • Municipality workers spray disinfectant as a precaution against the spread of coronavirus at the Kuwait Salmiya market. EPA
    Municipality workers spray disinfectant as a precaution against the spread of coronavirus at the Kuwait Salmiya market. EPA
  • Children hold olive branches as they look out from the sunroof of a car to be blessed by priests to celebrate Palm Sunday, amid the lockdown to contain the coronavirus in Marjayoun, southern Lebanon. Reuters
    Children hold olive branches as they look out from the sunroof of a car to be blessed by priests to celebrate Palm Sunday, amid the lockdown to contain the coronavirus in Marjayoun, southern Lebanon. Reuters
  • An empty Greek Catholic Church during a Mass on Palm Sunday in Beirut, Lebanon. EPA
    An empty Greek Catholic Church during a Mass on Palm Sunday in Beirut, Lebanon. EPA
  • Members of the Kurdish Red Crescent check passengers who were stranded in Damascus upon their arrival at the Qamishli airport in Syria's north-eastern Hasakeh province. AFP
    Members of the Kurdish Red Crescent check passengers who were stranded in Damascus upon their arrival at the Qamishli airport in Syria's north-eastern Hasakeh province. AFP
  • Coptic girls reacting while watching hymns performed on telelvision at home at Shubra Al Khema district in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
    Coptic girls reacting while watching hymns performed on telelvision at home at Shubra Al Khema district in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
  • Iraqi priests celebrate the Palm Sunday Mass at the empty Saint Joseph Church in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. AFP
    Iraqi priests celebrate the Palm Sunday Mass at the empty Saint Joseph Church in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. AFP
  • A Palestinian man, who was quarantined, talks on his phone on a hotel window in Gaza City. EPA
    A Palestinian man, who was quarantined, talks on his phone on a hotel window in Gaza City. EPA
  • Palestinian security policemen wearing protective gear, patrol on the street of Gaza city. EPA
    Palestinian security policemen wearing protective gear, patrol on the street of Gaza city. EPA
  • A street vendor wearing protective face mask stands between lines of cars during a sandstorm in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
    A street vendor wearing protective face mask stands between lines of cars during a sandstorm in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
  • Members of the Kurdish Red Crescent check passengers who were stranded in Damascus upon their arrival at the Qamishli airport in Syria's north-eastern Hasakeh province. AFP
    Members of the Kurdish Red Crescent check passengers who were stranded in Damascus upon their arrival at the Qamishli airport in Syria's north-eastern Hasakeh province. AFP
  • A view of an empty street during the coronavirus pandemic in Tunis, Tunisia. EPA
    A view of an empty street during the coronavirus pandemic in Tunis, Tunisia. EPA
  • A view of an empty street during the coronavirus pandemic in Tunis, Tunisia. EPA
    A view of an empty street during the coronavirus pandemic in Tunis, Tunisia. EPA
  • A statue representing the Virgin Mary and Jesus is seen in front of the closed St Maroun Maronite Catholic Church during Mass on Palm Sunday in downtown Beirut, Lebanon. EPA
    A statue representing the Virgin Mary and Jesus is seen in front of the closed St Maroun Maronite Catholic Church during Mass on Palm Sunday in downtown Beirut, Lebanon. EPA
  • Municipality workers spray disinfectant as a precaution against the spread of coronavirus at the Kuwait Salmiya market following the outbreak of coronavirus in Kuwait. EPA
    Municipality workers spray disinfectant as a precaution against the spread of coronavirus at the Kuwait Salmiya market following the outbreak of coronavirus in Kuwait. EPA
  • Afghan health workers spray disinfectants at public places in Helmand, Afghanistan. EPA
    Afghan health workers spray disinfectants at public places in Helmand, Afghanistan. EPA

There are currently 756 confirmed cases, 458 recoveries and four deaths.

Although the undersecretary did not mention the issue, Bahrain in March told Qatar to stop meddling in the repatriation process after Doha flew a number of Bahrainis to Qatar from Iran.

"Bahrain had arranged special flights directly from Mashhad airport to Bahrain airport in adherence with health and safety precautions," King Hamad's adviser and former foreign minister, Sheikh Khalid Al Khalifa, said on Twitter.

Due to the Gulf dispute, there are no flights directly from Doha to Manama and Qatari officials said that those Bahrainis that they had airlifted out of Iran would need to wait for their government to send a plane to bring them back.

Britain's former director of public health, Prof John Ashton, has praised the kingdom's response, saying "they've been very systematic, very proactive, very thorough".

As well as the “war-room strategy” for directing the national effort, he also highlighted the treatment of patients.

“They have a very interesting treatment protocol, which is quite a complex mixture of treatments that they are using under the direction of the military doctor who’s running the war room,” he said.

Bahrain says it has had some success using an antimalarial drug touted by US President Donald Trump.

Several countries around the world are trialling hydroxychloroquine and although the results are not yet conclusive, it appears to be somewhat effective in certain cases. But experts have ruled it out as a "silver bullet" cure.

Dr Mohammed Al Khalifa, chairman of the national medical team addressing the coronavirus, said in March that they had had successes with “a number” of cases.