Turkish Parliament suspends work after increase in COVID-19 cases on premises

Legislative work in the Turkish Parliament has been suspended until June 30 after an increase in coronavirus cases on its premises.
On June 24, seven new COVID-19 cases were confirmed in parliament including one technician at its hospital, an official at the press office and some staff working in the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) working for group chair Naci Bostancı.
The General Secretariat of parliament decided on a series of measures including the establishment of a pandemic team and the closure of its restaurants this week after a total of 19 personnel diagnosed with the virus since the outbreak. The General Assembly's hall, floors and rooms will be disinfected as part of the measures.
The suspension of the legislative work came at a meeting by parliament's deputy spokesperson Süreyya Sadi Bilgiç with the group deputy chairs of the parties on June 25.

HDP lawmaker tests positive

Meanwhile, an unnamed opposition lawmaker in Turkey tested positive for the novel coronavirus on June 26, according to the party's parliamentary group.

"It was discerned after initial tests that one of our lawmakers had been infected. The lawmaker is under the doctor's control and is improving," the Peoples' Democratic Party's (HDP) parliamentary group announced.

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