National Post (National Edition)

RISING COVID CASES IN EUROPE LEAD TO NEW RULES

Local restrictio­ns focus amid backlash over lockdowns

- KARLA ADAM

LONDON • England has seen new coronaviru­s cases quadruple in the past three weeks and now has more COVID-19 patients hospitaliz­ed than before the government imposed a lockdown in March, health authoritie­s said Monday, laying the groundwork for a fresh package of restrictio­ns.

But, like much of Europe, Britain is now pursuing targeted local restrictio­ns — such as closing pubs in Liverpool — while doing everything it can to avoid another national lockdown.

In a statement to Parliament, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he was trying to take a balanced approach, between the extremes of “shuttering our lives and our economy” and abandoning the fight.

“We don't want to go back to another national lockdown,” he said, but “we can't let the virus rip.”

Johnson announced a three-tier alert system, under which areas of highest concern — now including Liverpool — will see pubs and bars close and almost all mixing of households banned.

In areas that fall in the middle tier, people won't be allowed to meet indoors with others who are not part of their households. And the lowest tier will have to abide by measures already in place, with pubs closing at 10 p.m. and gatherings limited to six people.

Countries across Europe are similarly looking for compromise­s as they scramble to contain a resurgence that has seen a sharp rise in infections and hospital admissions. Even still, they face more anger and frustratio­n from businesses and individual­s than they did in the spring.

Ravi Gupta, a microbiolo­gist at the University of Cambridge, said that in Britain and other European countries, “a full lockdown is off the political agenda,” in part because the “fear factor” around the virus is not what it was in the spring.

While full lockdowns are best for

limiting deaths and transmissi­ons, he said, “it's clear that people can't endure long-term restrictio­ns outside of authoritar­ian regimes.”

France hinted that it might impose further restrictio­ns after a leap in cases and hospitaliz­ations. On Saturday, authoritie­s reported 27,000 new cases in the previous 24 hours — a record. And on Monday, health officials said the number of people hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 had surpassed 8,600 for the first time since late June.

“If over the next two weeks we see the indicators worsen, if intensive care beds fill up even more than we expect, we will indeed take additional measures,” Prime Minister Jean Castex said, urging people to limit gatherings in homes.

The French government has avoided imposing a second nationwide lockdown, but it has imposed new restrictio­ns, notably on restaurant capacity and alcohol sale times, in major urban areas.

French President Emmanuel Macron is to address the nation Wednesday night.

In Spain, Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez invoked emergency powers on Friday to prevent travel in and out of Madrid, overruling the Conservati­ve local government.

Opposition to the move was evident during Spain's National Day celebratio­ns on Monday. People gathered outside an event at the Royal Palace to boo Sanchez's government, and the far-right Vox party led a car caravan protest against “the criminal and totalitari­an government.”

The Madrid region has reported

more than 20,000 new coronaviru­s cases over the past seven days, making it one of the worst-hit areas of Europe's second wave.

In Belgium, the diagnosed cases last week were 89 per cent higher than the previous week. A spokesman for the national coronaviru­s response, Yves Van Laethem, warned Monday that if current trends aren't halted, the number of people in intensive care units at the end of October could rival the heights seen in March and April.

“All indicators continue to increase alarmingly,” Van Laethem told reporters.

Germany on Monday added Munich to a growing list of coronaviru­s “red” zones, which triggers new restrictio­ns. As of Wednesday, Munich's bars and restaurant­s will be required to stop serving alcohol after 10 p.m. Mask-wearing will be mandatory for pedestrian­s, and no more than two households, or up to five people, are allowed to meet in groups. Private indoor events are capped at 25 attendees, and outdoor events at 50. The rules will stay in effect for at least two weeks.

In Italy, the number of daily cases has not reached the number seen in some other Western European countries, but the trajectory is nonetheles­s worrying.

And unlike in the springtime, when the outbreak mainly struck the country's richer north, it is now reaching into southern regions with frailer economies and hospital systems.

Italy last week issued a nationwide mandate that masks be worn outdoors as well as indoors.

 ?? TOBY MELVILLE / POOL / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a virtual news conference on Monday, saying he is trying to take a targeted
and balanced approach to new coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.
TOBY MELVILLE / POOL / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a virtual news conference on Monday, saying he is trying to take a targeted and balanced approach to new coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

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