The price of garlic has shot up in Tunisia amid a buying rush as consumers hope it will help protect against the new coronavirus, despite caution from the World Health Organization.
In Tunisia’s central market this week, and in supermarkets and other stores, the price of garlic has risen to around 20-25 dinars ($7-$8.85) a kilo, in a country where the average monthly salary is around 600 dinars.
The price of garlic has shot up in #Tunisia amid a buying rush as consumers hope it will help protect against the new #coronavirus, despite caution from the World Health Organization @WHO. #COVID_19https://t.co/hq3ZTqMPjE
— Al Arabiya English (@AlArabiya_Eng) March 13, 2020
“Before, I used to buy five kilos (of garlic) for eight dinars a kilo and would sell it for 12, but now I can’t buy it anymore because the price has gone up so much”, said Khames Nabli, a shopkeeper in the south of the capital.
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Tunisia has registered six cases of the novel coronavirus, most in people who had been in Italy. A seventh person infected with the virus has returned to France.
Garlic is often used to help ward off the flu, whose symptoms can be similar to those of COVID-19. But the rumour that garlic cures coronavirus is fake.
But some online websites and online posts have incorrectly suggested the bulb can protect against the novel coronavirus, which the World Health Organization has declared a pandemic.
The WHO has sought to combat rumours about the virus, including the effect of garlic.
“Garlic is a healthy food that may have some antimicrobial properties,” the WHO website’s coronavirus “myth busters” page reads in several languages, including French and Arabic. “However, there is no evidence from the current outbreak that eating garlic has protected people from the new coronavirus.”
That hasn’t stopped people rushing to buy it in Tunisia.
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“This unjustified rush has pushed up prices”, said Yasser Ben Khalifa, a commerce ministry official, citing difficulties in obtaining supplies on the world market.
“The prices at the moment should be around 12 or 13 dinars”, he told AFP, expecting a marked drop in prices at the start of the Tunisian harvest in April.
AFP with inputs from GVS News Desk