Panicked Europe battens down against COVID second wave
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[October 14, 2020]
By Jan Lopatka and Marine Strauss
PRAGUE/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European
countries have begun to close schools and cancel surgeries, going well
beyond curbs on social life, as overwhelmed authorities face their
nightmare scenario of a COVID-19 resurgence right before the onset of
winter.
Most European nations eased lockdowns over the summer to start reviving
economies already heading for unprecedented downturns and job losses
from the pandemic's first wave.
But the return of normal activity - from packed restaurants to new
university terms - fuelled a sharply-rising spike in cases all over the
continent.
Bars and pubs were among the first to shut or face earlier closing in
the new lockdowns, but now the surging infection rates are also testing
governments' resolve to keep schools open and non-COVID medical care
going.
The Czech Republic, which has Europe's worst rate per capita, has
shifted schools to distance learning and hospitals started cutting
non-urgent medical procedures to free up beds. Bars, restaurants and
clubs have shut.
"Sometimes we are at the edge of crying, that happens quite often now,"
said Lenka Krejcova, a head nurse at Slany hospital northwest of Prague,
as builders sped through the hospital's corridors to turn a general ward
into a COVID-19 department.
Moscow authorities said on Wednesday they would introduce online
learning for many students starting on Monday, while Northern Ireland
announced a two-week schools' closure.
Major European economies of Germany, Britain and France have so far
resisted pressure to close schools, a move that during the spring
lockdowns created hardship across the workforce, with parents struggling
to juggle child care and work from home.
'IT'S A MESS'
In Germany, politicians are debating whether to extend the Christmas-New
Year break to reduce contagion among children spreading to the wider
community, though critics say there is no evidence that schools have
been infection hot spots.
The Netherlands returned to "partial lockdown" on Wednesday, closing
bars and restaurants, but kept schools open.
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A woman wearing a mask looks at street art as she walks at the
International Street Art Museum following the new social
restrictions announced by the Dutch government, as the Netherlands
battle to control the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19),
in Amsterdam, Netherlands 14 October 2020. REUTERS/Piroschka van de
Wouw
European daily infections have been running at an average of almost
100,000 a day, forcing governments to introduce a range of
tightening restrictions, each attempting to calibrate them in order
to protect health without destroying livelihoods.
"It's a mess, it's a mess, my son, what can I tell you? We really
don't know how we are going to end up," said an Italian pensioner in
Rome.
French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to unveil further
restrictions on Wednesday, with media reporting that city curfews
are under consideration.
France's five largest cities - Paris, Marseille, Lyon, Toulouse and
Lille - are already on maximum alert, with bars and gyms closed and
restaurants under strict controls.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faces opposition calls to
impose another national lockdown in England, but has so far
resisted. Hospital admissions, however, are climbing and field
hospitals in the spring are once more being readied.
In Spain, authorities in its richest region of Catalonia are set to
announce either a closure of bars and restaurants for two weeks or a
drastic reduction in opening hours.
In Belgium, with Europe's second worst infection rate per capita,
hospitals now have to reserve a quarter of their beds for COVID-19
patients.
"We can't see the end of the tunnel today," Renaud Mazy, the
managing director of the University Clinics of Saint-Luc in
Brussels, told Belgian radio La Premiere.
(Additional reporting by Emma Thomasson in Berlin and Antonio Denti
in Rome; Writing by Mark Bendeich; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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