
- Lagos governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu said churches and mosques would reopen as lockdown measures eased.
- The facilities would be allowed to operate at 50% capacity.
- Elderly worshippers would not be allowed to attend.
The governor of Nigeria's commercial capital Lagos said on Saturday churches and mosques would reopen next week as the authorities move to ease the lockdown over the coronavirus pandemic.
"Places of worship in Lagos will now be opened from Friday, the 7th of August for our Muslim worshippers, and on Sunday, the 9th of August for our Christian worshippers," Babajide Sanwo-Olu said in a statement.
But the numbers of worshippers will be limited as a measure to prevent further infections.
"We will only allow 50% of their maximum capacities, either at the church or at the mosque," he said.
"For the avoidance of doubt, there will be Friday worships for our Muslim followers and Sunday worships for our Christian followers," the governor said.
But night vigils and other services are still not allowed, he added.
Sanwo-Olu also advised elderly worshippers from 65 years to stay at home.
Lagos, Nigeria's largest city of over 20 million inhabitants, shut churches, mosques, night clubs and hotels in March as part of measures to curb the spread of Covid-19.
The virus has so far infected 43 151 people and killed 879 since the first case was listed in late February, according to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control.
Lagos, the country's largest city, is the epicentre of the outbreak in Nigeria, with more than 15 000 confirmed cases and 192 deaths.
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