Turkey Comes Back to Life Slowly!

Published June 2nd, 2020 - 06:39 GMT
Mannequins, are placed on some tables by the cafe owner to keep keeping social distancing rules with customers, during the reopening restaurants and cafes in Istanbul on June 1, 2020 . Turkey reopened restaurants, cafes and Istanbul's iconic 15th century Grand Bazaar market on Monday as the government further eased coronavirus restrictions.Many other facilities including parks, beaches, libraries and museums also reopened across the country, while millions of public sector employees returned to work. Ozan K
Mannequins, are placed on some tables by the cafe owner to keep keeping social distancing rules with customers, during the reopening restaurants and cafes in Istanbul on June 1, 2020 . Turkey reopened restaurants, cafes and Istanbul's iconic 15th century Grand Bazaar market on Monday as the government further eased coronavirus restrictions.Many other facilities including parks, beaches, libraries and museums also reopened across the country, while millions of public sector employees returned to work. Ozan KOSE / AFP
Highlights
Turkish Airlines made its first flight from Istanbul to Ankara, carrying 156 passengers after 59 day-long break.

Turkey's normalization process has started Monday as the government decided to ease restrictions related to the novel coronavirus, considering the country’s advances in fighting the pandemic.

Transport and Infrastructure Minister Adil Karaismailoglu said they will never make compromises on wearing masks, social distancing, personal and general hygiene.

The country continues the normalization process through high-level measures to protect community healthcare, Karaismailoglu added.

Domestic flights resumed as part of the normalization process after the months-long virus restrictions, with the first flights from Istanbul to major cities of Ankara, Izmir, Antalya, and Trabzon provinces.

Turkish Airlines made its first flight from Istanbul to Ankara, carrying 156 passengers after 59 day-long break.

The first flight from Istanbul’s Sabiha Gokcen Airport headed to Izmir Adnan Menderes Airport by Pegasus Airlines.

With the entry and exit restrictions in 15 provinces lifted as of midnight May 31, dozens of people poured into bus terminals. Bus companies added additional trips to supply the high demand of passengers.

Swimming pools, hot springs, Turkish baths, saunas and spas resumed services within certain precautionary rules. Sports centers and facilities also reopened.

The number of people in sports centers will be limited to one person per six square meters (64.5 square feet), the Health Ministry announced.

It is not appropriate to perform team games and other branches of sports that require close contact, including boxing and wrestling, added the ministry added.

Meanwhile, museums and archeological sites are ready to host visitors by considering hygiene measures and social distance.

The Mevlana Museum, dedicated to the 13th-century Muslim poet and mystic Mevlana Jalaluddin al-Rumi, located in the central Konya province, opened its doors to visitors with a sema ceremony, also known as Mevlevi Ayin-i Sherif.

Abdussettar Yarar, the provincial director of culture and tourism, told Anadolu Agency they will respect all measures, including limits on the number of visitors and social distancing.

Meanwhile, non-contact visits in prisons, which were halted on March 13, began on Monday. Convicts and detainees could only meet with one of their relatives by wearing masks.

As of Monday, civil servants on administrative leave or working remotely will return to their workplaces.

The pandemic has claimed more than 372,400 lives in 188 countries and regions since originating in China last December. The US and Europe are currently the world’s worst-hit regions.

Over 6.18 million cases have been reported worldwide. More than 2.65 million people have recovered so far, according to figures compiled by the US’ Johns Hopkins University.

Turkey has so far confirmed 163,942 cases, while recoveries neared 128,000. The virus has killed 4,540 people so far, according to the Health Ministry data.

This article has been adapted from its original source.

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