FG laments disregard for Covid-19 protocols in marketplaces, urges temperature check

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The  Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 has lamented the wilful flouting of Covid-19 protocols at marketplaces in the country.

It has therefore charged market authorities to display a sense of responsibility by ensuring there are temperature checks before buyers and sellers transact businesses at the various markets scattered all over the country.

PTF National Incident Manager, Mukhtar Muhammed, stated this on Friday while featuring on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily programme.

Mukhtar noted that checking temperature alone is not enough adding that traders and buyers must also comply with other Covid-19 protocols like using of face masks, social distancing and washing of hands at market places.

Muhammed said, “We want economic activities to continue but this has to be in a regulated fashion where there won’t be increased risk for people transacting their businesses.

“We would want to see a market where before you enter the market, there is somebody stationed there to measure your body temperature. And if your temperature is above 38 degrees, you will be turned back and advised to seek assistance or linked directly to where you will have a test done. If your temperature is negative, then, they will also ensure that you have a face mask which is actually the first step – if you don’t have a face mask, you won’t be allowed to come near the gate of the market.

“We also envision to see where the market authorities themselves become responsible and ensure that all these measures are put in place and people that are not complying are quickly refuted or taken out of the market place.

“We also want to see the law enforcement agencies working side by side with the necessary stakeholders –the association of the market regulators to ensure that these protocols are complied with. Not only the markets but all public places, the supermarkets, parks, event centres and so on and so forth.”

The disregard for Covid protocols at the market places have become worrisome in the last eleven months since Nigeria recorded its index case of the virus in February 2020.

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