Indonesia Seizes Half a Million Masks from Hoarders
Vendors wearing outfits of local superhero Gundala and Batman hawk traditional Indonesian herbal drinks known as “jamu” in traffic in Solo, Indonesia, ostensibly to protect against coronavirus infection
Indonesian police seized over half a million face masks from a Jakarta-area warehouse after the country’s first confirmed cases of coronavirus sparked panic buying and sent prices for prevention products skyrocketing.
Authorities were questioning two people after the Tuesday evening raid at a warehouse in satellite city Tangerang, where nearly 600,000 surgical masks were found.
The owners did not have permission to distribute the masks, police said.
“Mask prices have skyrocketed everywhere and there are shortages, most likely because hoarders are trying to make money at the public’s expense,” Jakarta police spokesman Yusri Yunus told AFP Wednesday.
Those convicted of hoarding masks could face up to five years in jail and hefty fines, police said.
The warehouse raid came after hundreds of boxes of surgical masks were also seized Tuesday at a Jakarta apartment.
And police said they busted a factory at the weekend allegedly making and distributing counterfeit masks that did not meet health standards.
Vendors in fancy dress offer samples of a local herbal tonic to motorists in Solo, Indonesia
“Those masks are useless,” Yunus said.
“They won’t protect people who use them.”
The crackdown was ordered by Indonesian president Joko Widodo who has called on citizens to avoid panic buying — even as store shelves are cleared and prices soar for masks and hand sanitizers.
Major cities including Tokyo, Hong Kong, Sydney have also seen panic buying sparked by the virus.
Indonesians, meanwhile, are scooping up a traditional herbal tonic known as jamu and in one city sellers dressed as Batman and local superhero Gundala were handing out the drink to motorists.
“My sales have more than doubled since Monday,” said Nur Hidayati, 29, a jamu seller in Bogor near Jakarta.
“People tell me they want jamu to stay healthy and immune from the virus.”
On Monday, Indonesia confirmed its first coronavirus cases, saying a 64-year-old woman and her daughter, 31, tested positive.
Globally, coronavirus has infected more than 90,000 people and killed at least 3,100 people.
But Indonesia — a Southeast Asian archipelago of more than 260 million — had yet to report a confirmed case until this week.