Ba boholong 'musong oa Malta ba phatlalalitse hore mask oa sefahleho joale o tlamehile ho bonts'a sechaba, mme likopano tsohle tse kholo li thibetsoe, ho qala ka Labohlano bosiu. Mehato e mecha ea lithibelo e ile ea hlohlelletsoa ke spike palo ea tse ncha Covid-19 linyeoe tsa ts'oaetso, kamora hore li fokotsoe ho fihlela zero ka beke ka Phupu.
Ba boholong lefapheng la bophelo bo botle ba tlaleha tšoaetso e ncha e 49 ka Labohlano, palo ea bobeli e phahameng ka ho fetisisa ea letsatsi le letsatsi ho tloha ha nyeoe ea pele e fumanoe mathoasong a Hlakubele. Bakuli ba robong ba hlokahetse.
Qeto ea ho beha litaelo bocha e emela phetoho e matla Malta, e ipapisitseng le bohahlauli bakeng sa karolo ea boraro ea GDP ea eona.
Naha ea Mediterranean e entse liteko tsa boraro tse phahameng ka ho fetisisa EU mme e tlositse lithibelo mme ea bula bocha maeto a mose ho maoatle khoeling e fetileng ha lipalo tsa linyeoe li theoha. Hona joale e se e kenella lenaneng le ntseng le hola la linaha tse qobelletsoeng ho busetsa taolo morao kamora katleho ea pele ea ho laola lefu lena.
#ho hahahaha
SEO U LOKELANG HO SE NKA HO SEHLOOHO ENA:
- New restrictive measures were prompted by a spike in the number of new COVID-19 infection cases, after they have been reduced to zero for a week in July.
- Qeto ea ho beha litaelo bocha e emela phetoho e matla Malta, e ipapisitseng le bohahlauli bakeng sa karolo ea boraro ea GDP ea eona.
- The Mediterranean country has conducted the third-highest level of testing in the EU and had lifted restrictions and re-opened some overseas travel last month as case numbers fell.