(Updates with new confirmed cases)
DAKAR, March 14 (Reuters) - Senegal's President Macky Sall
on Saturday ordered all schools and universities closed for the
next three weeks and religious festivals cancelled in response
to a coronavirus outbreak that has infected 24 people in the
past two weeks.
Senegal is the first sub-Saharan African country to close
its schools, according to a list compiled by U.N. cultural
agency UNESCO. As of Friday, 39 countries had closed schools
nationwide, affecting over 420 million children and youths,
UNESCO said.
Since Thursday, 17 contacts of a man who returned from Italy
to the city of Touba, which was scheduled to host a religious
festival later this month, have tested positive. The man's
two-year-old baby was one of three new confirmed cases on
Saturday, the health ministry said.
"With the appearance of a hotbed of community transmission
in Touba, I instructed the government (to adopt) a contingency
plan to prevent the propagation of the epidemic," Sall said
after a meeting with his advisers.
He added that the army would help build mobile hospitals.
Senegal has confirmed the second most coronavirus cases in
sub-Saharan Africa, behind South Africa, which has reported 38.
The region did not record its first case until Feb. 28 in
Nigeria, but there are now dozens of cases across at least 16
countries. Rwanda and Namibia both announced their first cases
on Saturday.