Life at a standstill - Bangkok

Dining amid social distancing measures to curb transmission of coronavirus

People staying in their apartments in central Bangkok on March 23, 2020, amid fears over the spread of Covid-19. PHOTO: AFP

The motorcycle taxi that I had just got off didn't seem to be leaving. I turned around, half expecting to be accused by the driver of paying her less than agreed.

But she was busy. Having carefully stowed the 30 baht (S$1.30) I had given her, she vigorously rubbed her hands with alcohol gel from a bottle dangling off her handlebar. She did this for a full minute - under the blazing sun - before zooming off to look for another passenger.

With over 1,500 cases of coronavirus infections recorded so far, even relaxed folk in Thailand are getting nervous.

A woman with extra protective gear shopping at a supermarket in Bangkok on March 21, 2020. PHOTO: AFP

The country has been trying to curb domestic transmission while averting a full-scale lockdown.

In place of this option is a series of restrictions steadily erected by local administrations using special legislation like the emergency decree that came into effect on March 26.

In the southern border province of Yala, where a 50-year-old man who attended a mass mosque gathering in Kuala Lumpur has died, the governor banned non-essential entry and exit of vehicles in key districts.

Checkpoints have been set up along major roads across the nation and inter-provincial buses are allowed to operate only at half their usual capacity.

The pandemic has pushed the military, which ended its five-year rule over Thailand just last year, back into the headlines.

One of the biggest clusters of infected people is linked to a controversial kickboxing match held in the army-owned Lumpinee Boxing Stadium.

Defence forces chief Pornpipat Benyasri, placed in charge of security affairs in this state of emergency, on March 26 reminded Thais to be disciplined, warning of even more draconian measures otherwise.

"We should control ourselves instead of being forced to do so by the state," he said, warning that a daytime curfew could be imposed if people did not stay home and the rate of infections continued rising apace.

Street food carts are parked in an alley in Bangkok on March 30, 2020, as Thailand observes stricter measures to combat the spread of the Covid-19. PHOTO: AFP

Thailand's borders are officially closed to all tourists, but there are stragglers.

At Wat Arun, or the Temple of Dawn, a young Russian family traipsed around the quiet lawn by the Chao Phraya river trying to get pictures of the towering stupas behind. They were the only people around not wearing masks.

"We forgot the masks today," 47-year-old Mikhail Ajeev said sheepishly. "This evening, we will put them back on."

His wife, Alla, is a nurse who will be heading straight to the front lines of Russia's own battle against the virus upon their return to Moscow this week. Russia's coronavirus cases surged past 1,800 on March 30.

Thai authorities have imposed a series of protective measures which include closing all entertainment venues and schools, as well as indefinitely postponing the Songkran. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

Nearby, drinks vendor Rapeeporn Raksak hurriedly put on her mask as I approached. "These days, I walk away from people after saying what I need to say," she confessed. "I dare not linger."

Bangkok's malls are shut, but their food outlets remain open for takeaway orders.

After buying a burger in a mall last Friday, I searched in vain for a corner to take a bite.

But all the chairs in foodcourts have been cleared away.

Some restaurants have barricaded their seating areas.

Office workers disappeared back into their cubicles with plastic bowls of noodles. Others, like me, wandered around the vast empty podium with their packed lunches like lost sheep.

I briefly entertained the idea of scarfing my lunch down by the kerb outside, but eventually dragged my famished self home.

Dining amid social distancing probably needs a little practice.



Source: Reuters, AFP and EPA-EFE
Produced by: Lee Pei Jie, Linda Yulisman, Tan Hui Yee, Rohini Mohan, Nirmal Ghosh, Raul Dancel, Tin May Linn and Trinna Leong