(Corrects spelling of doctor's name in penultimate paragraph of
Sunday's story to Celalettin, not Celallettin)
ISTANBUL, Nov 29 (Reuters) - Coronavirus deaths in Turkey
rose to a record for the seventh consecutive day on Sunday and
the number of new cases remained high despite efforts by
President Tayyip Erdogan's government to contain a second wave
of infections.
Turkey is expected to report this week that its economy
bounced back from a sharp coronavirus-induced slump earlier this
year. But that recovery, key to Erdogan's sustained political
support, could be threatened by the new outbreak.
The government introduced tighter measures a week ago
including nightly curfews at weekends, restrictions on movements
of people of non-working age, a move to online schooling and
limiting restaurants and cafes to takeaway services.
However the moves have done little to halt a remorseless
rise in cases and fatalities, with Sunday's toll of 185 dead 45%
above the peak of the first wave in April, and the number of new
cases behind only the United States, India and Brazil - all
countries with far larger populations than Turkey.
More than 29,000 cases were reported in the last 24 hours.
Saturday's figure of 30,103 was the highest recorded, but
authorities have only been including asymptomatic cases - as
most other countries have regularly done - since Wednesday.
Doctors and opposition politicians have called for stricter
measures, but with shops, restaurants and hotels already hit by
the new clampdown, the government is anxious to avoid further
economic pain and said people had a personal duty to cooperate.
"Our health army is under a heavy burden," Health Minister
Fahrettin Koca said on Twitter. "Each of us is responsible for
following the measures."
Speaking after midday prayers on Friday, Erdogan attributed
the resurgent pandemic to people flouting regulations.
"Masks and (social) distance are very important, hygiene is
very important. As long as these are not heeded, especially in
big cities, the increasing continuation of (the virus) becomes
inevitable," he told reporters.
Opponents say the government needs to take tougher action.
"The lives lost are our lives. But we see that the
government is still trying to manage the situation with band-aid
measures," Meral Aksener, leader of the opposition IYI Party,
said in parliament last week.
"I am calling out to Mr Erdogan from here once again - come,
impose a quarantine of at least 14 days."
Celalettin Kocaturk, a specialist chest surgeon at an
Istanbul hospital, echoed the call for stricter measures, saying
that if the steps taken last weekend were going to be effective,
they would have made a difference by now.
"Based on current data, we look to be at the top of the
worldwide list of cases per population," he told Reuters. "We
need to act very dynamically without waiting further."
(Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Jan Harvey)