Chief district officers of the Kathmandu valley have decided to extend the lockdown imposed in the three districts until July 5. The restrictions have been further relaxed in consideration of a gradual decline in the number of active Covid-19 cases in the valley.
Chief district officers of the Kathmandu valley have decided to extend the lockdown imposed in the three districts until June 28. However, the restrictions have been heavily relaxed.
Chief district officers of Kathmandu, Bhaktapur, and Lalitpur have decided to extend the ongoing lockdown, officially the prohibitory order, imposed in the valley by seven days, until June 21.
Chief district officers of Kathmandu, Bhaktapur, and Lalitpur have decided to extend the ongoing lockdown, officially the prohibitory order, imposed in the valley by 11 days, until June 14.
Citing crowds continued to gather notwithstanding the implementation of the lockdown to contain the coronavirus spread, the Kalimati fruit and vegetable market, the biggest vegetable market in the Kathmandu valley, has shut its retailing section.
Farmers in Bajrabarahi, Thaha municipality-6 of the Makawanpur district, some kilometres south of Kathmandu, have thrown kilograms of cauliflowers and other vegetables they produced complaining they could not find a market to sell them.
The ongoing lockdown, officially called the prohibitory order, imposed in three districts of the Kathmandu valley to control the coronavirus spread has officially been extended until May 12.
The Kathmandu metropolitan city says the amount of waste that it collects from different areas of the city has reduced by around 30 to 50 per cent in the past four days since the city entered another round of lockdown to control the spread of the coronavirus.