Greece hopes to lift COVID curbs in retail before end-March, tourism in
May
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[March 08, 2021]
ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece plans to
lift COVID-19 restrictions in the retail sector and open schools before
the end of March and begin to re-open the tourism sector in May ahead of
the vital summer season, a government spokeswoman said on Monday.
The decision hinges on epidemiological data, Aristotelia Peloni told
reporters.
In the mid-term, as vaccinations progress, the government plans to allow
outdoor dining in April and to restart tourism, which accounts for about
a fifth of Greece's economic output and employs one in five people.
How the sector fares will be crucial for the country which is slowly
emerging from a decade-long debt crisis but which has seen sees its
economy shrink sharply due to COVID-19 restrictions.
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Greece, which has suffered 6,758 COVID deaths, was recently forced to
extend a lockdown in the wider Athens region to March 16 due to a
resurgence in infections but Peloni said there were signs of hope ahead.
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People visit Porto Katsiki beach on the island of Lefkada, Greece,
July 25, 2020. REUTERS/Dimitris Rapakousis
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"We still have tough days ahead of us. But we running the last mile
in this marathon race," she said.
The country registered 1,142 cases and 53 COVID-related deaths on
Sunday. It has recorded a total of 205,120 infections since its
first case emerged a year ago and its health sector, badly weakened
during the financial crisis has been struggling.
Most recently, with 466 patients currently intubated, authorities
have been increasingly concerned about COVID admissions in state
hospitals as most of them are operating at full capacity.
(Reporting by Renee Maltezou and Angeliki Koutantou)
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