DUBAI/RIYADH- The United Arab Emirates said on Wednesday it would bar foreign visitors and banned citizens from going abroad, while Saudi Arabia included most of its private sector in a work suspension to battle the spread of the coronavirus in the Gulf region.

Kuwait recorded 12 more cases on Wednesday, including six Kuwaitis, an American resident and a Spanish resident who had all been to Britain. This took the total number of infections in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council to more than 1,100.

The UAE, a major air transit centre and the region's tourism and business hub, on Wednesday banned Emiratis from travelling abroad and said it would suspend the issuance of visas on arrival from Thursday until further notice. It had already barred those who did not qualify for visas on arrival. 

Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have already been under virtual lockdown after temporarily suspending all international flights last week and closing most public venues.

Qatar, which has the highest number of cases in the Arab Gulf region at 442, and Oman have banned entry of foreigners.

Muscat, which has also prevented citizens from travelling abroad, asked travel operators to advise foreign tourists against staying in the sultanate.

Oman also suspended public transportation, excluding buses serving remote areas, while Qatar said 80% of government employees would work from home.

The moves are the latest in a series of exceptional measures by Gulf states to combat the outbreak, including cancelling the Umrah pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia and closing mosques, malls and restaurants across the region. 

 

WORK CLOSURES

Saudi Arabia, the largest Arab economy, suspended work in most of the private sector for 15 days and directed businesses to implement work-from-home policies.

The human resource ministry said businesses should close main offices, reduce staff levels at secondary locations, limit staff contact and monitor them for symptoms of infection.

It outlined exceptions for companies providing vital food and health services as well as utility services for government agencies. Pregnant women, workers over 55 and those with severe pre-existing conditions must be given 14 days additional leave.

Police cars patrolled streets in several Saudi cities, asking people to leave parks and public areas, local media said.

"Young people, you are banned from being in public rest areas!" police in the northern Tabuk province repeatedly said through loudspeakers, videos posted on social media showed.

Earlier this week, the government suspended work for public sector employees beyond health and security and halted its regular cabinet meetings, while the central bank implemented work-from-home measures for banks.

Oman's central bank became the latest to offer stimulus packages to shield the region's hydrocarbon-dependent economies, saying on Wednesday it would provide some 8 billion rials ($20.8 billion) in extra liquidity to banks.

 

BAHRAIN EVACUATES CITIZENS

Many of the cases in the region are linked to travel to Iran, where the death toll from coronavirus has hit 1,135 and the number of infections 17,361 so far.

Bahrain, which this week recorded the GCC's first death from the disease, will evacuate more citizens from the Iranian city of Mashhad with a second repatriation flight scheduled for Thursday, a Bahraini official told Reuters.

He said the flight, using an Omani aircraft, had been delayed for a week while quarantine facilities were being prepared in Bahrain, where a main isolation centre has been set up on a barren island linked to the mainland by a causeway.

Gulf airlines have suspended dozens of routes as the coronavirus outbreak disrupts global travel. The UAE still allows entry of foreign diplomats and residents and foreign visitors can still enter Bahrain. Qatar and Oman continue to permit transit flights.

Qatar Airways laid off about 200 Filipino staff in Qatar this week, Philippine Labour Secretary Silvestre Bello told Reuters. Dubai-based Emirates said it has asked pilots to take unpaid leave.

(Reporting by Hesham Abdul Khalek, Stephen Kalin, Alexander Cornwell, Aziz El Yaakoubi, Parisa Hafezi, Lisa Barrington, Yousef Saba, Maher Chmaytelli, Davide Barbuscia; Writing by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Michael Perry and Philippa Fletcher) ((Nayera.Abdallah@thomsonreuters.com;))