Mauritius Shuts Down After More COVID-19 Cases

Mauritius Shuts Down After More COVID-19 Cases
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Mauritius Shuts Down After More COVID-19 Cases

Mauritius Shuts Down After More COVID-19 Cases

Mauritius has gone into lockdown and suspended flights in and out of the island for two weeks following the discovery of 15 more cases of COVID-19, the Mauritius state tourism agency said on Wednesday.

The Indian Ocean island of 1.4 million people has had 641 confirmed coronavirus cases with 10 deaths, according to the latest World Health Organization (WHO) data.

All residents and visitors have been asked to stay at home or in their hotels until March 25, the agency said in a statement.

"We have decided to implement the nationwide lockdown to make sure that there is no risk of it spreading further," said Nilen Vencadasmy, chairman of the Mauritius Tourism Promotion Authority.

"Mauritius is looking forward to welcoming visitors back later in 2021 in the knowledge that we are a safe and secure destination."

The agency said Mauritius' vaccination program against the coronavirus has been underway since January, offering Oxford/AstraZeneca shots free of charge.



Tehran Urges Washington to Stop ‘Role-Sharing’ with Israel

Ghalibaf presiding over a parliamentary session (File photo – Parliament website)
Ghalibaf presiding over a parliamentary session (File photo – Parliament website)
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Tehran Urges Washington to Stop ‘Role-Sharing’ with Israel

Ghalibaf presiding over a parliamentary session (File photo – Parliament website)
Ghalibaf presiding over a parliamentary session (File photo – Parliament website)

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf has called on US President Donald Trump to “change his approach” and stop “coordinating roles” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he hopes to reach a new nuclear deal with Tehran.

In a speech opening the Iranian parliament’s weekly session, Ghalibaf criticized a recent US proposal relayed via Oman - a key mediator in the indirect talks between Tehran and Washington - describing it as lacking substance and contradictory in its intent. While Iran has not yet issued an official response to the proposal, Ghalibaf made it clear that Tehran is dissatisfied.

“The American proposal doesn’t even mention lifting sanctions,” Ghalibaf said. “It clearly shows the contradictory behavior of the United States in the indirect negotiations.”

He added: “The delusional American president must realize that if he truly wants an agreement, he must change his approach, stop dividing roles with the Zionist regime, and abandon Netanyahu’s failed talking points.”

Ghalibaf reaffirmed Iran’s commitment to the Strategic Action Law to Lift Sanctions, which was passed by the Iranian parliament at the end of Trump’s first term in office, shortly after Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election.

Under that law, Iran resumed uranium enrichment at 20% in January 2021 and activated advanced centrifuges at its Natanz nuclear facility. These steps came just weeks into Biden’s presidency, as he unsuccessfully sought a return to the 2015 nuclear agreement.

By February 2021, Tehran had suspended the Additional Protocol of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, significantly reducing its cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Then, in April of the same year, Iran raised its uranium enrichment level to 60% at Natanz and later resumed high-level enrichment at its deeply buried Fordow facility.

“We reaffirm, as clearly stated in the Strategic Action Law, that Iran is ready - in exchange for the lifting of sanctions and economic benefits while maintaining enrichment on its own soil - to take necessary steps to build trust and prove the peaceful nature of its nuclear activities,” Ghalibaf said.

He stressed the need for Iran to rely on domestic capacities and improve the living and economic conditions of its people, saying this would pressure the “arrogant American government” to lift sanctions as part of a mutually beneficial agreement.

“We have said it many times and repeat it again today: Solving the people’s economic and livelihood problems through internal capabilities will force the US to accept a fair deal,” Ghalibaf concluded.