Ottawa Citizen

‘We are at war,’ Spain’s PM says

Country seeks extended state of emergency

- JOAN FAUS

MADRID • The Spanish government is seeking to extend until April 11 a state of emergency that it has imposed to try to control Europe’s second-worst outbreak of coronaviru­s.

The death toll jumped to over 1,700, with more than 28,000 cases of infection.

“We are at war,” Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez told a news briefing on Sunday, a day after warning that “the worst is yet to come” in the coronaviru­s outbreak.

He said the military would have a larger role in the pandemic’s response and called for more economic help from the European Union.

The nationwide state of emergency, announced on March 14 and intended to last 15 days, bars people from all but essential outings.

An extension would need to be approved by parliament but that is guaranteed after the main opposition party, the conservati­ve People’s Party, said it would support it, giving enough votes to Sanchez’s Socialist Party and its far-left government coalition partner Unidas Podemos.

Sanchez said he hoped all parties would support the extension. It would be the first time in Spain’s four-decade democracy that a state of emergency would be prolonged.

Parliament has a scheduled plenary session on Wednesday.

Sanchez praised Spaniards’ commitment to home confinemen­t, and defended the need to extend the state of emergency, saying,

“We hope that with this so drastic, dramatic and hard measure ... we can bend the coronaviru­s’ curve.”

The death toll from coronaviru­s rose to 1,720 on Sunday from 1,326 the day before, while the number of registered cases rose to 28,572 from 24,926, according to Health Ministry’s data.

Officials cautiously highlighte­d that the number of new daily registered cases had dropped by 26 per cent from Saturday to Sunday.

“The general trend towards stabilizat­ion can give some hope but we need to be very cautious,” said Fernando Simon, head of Spain’s health emergency committee, at an earlier briefing. The death rate from the illness is around 6 per cent in Spain, said Simon, but he suggested the rate is actually lower because the number of cases of infection is likely higher than those recorded.

Authoritie­s aim to have a more realistic picture in the coming days as they start distributi­ng hundreds of thousands of fast testing devices. Priority for those tests will be given to the regions most hit by the pandemic, hospitals and health personnel, Simon added.

The Spanish Armed Forces will expand its role in dealing with the outbreak by moving patients to less overcrowde­d hospitals, transporti­ng health equipment and helping Spaniards abroad return home, Sanchez said.

The government also announced that, starting at midnight, it will restrict entry for most foreigners for the next 30 days. European Union leaders agreed to close the bloc’s external borders for the same period.

Sanchez said the European Union “can do and must do more” to help deal with the devastatin­g economic impact. Spain has one of the developed world’s highest unemployme­nt rates.

He called for a grand public investment program and the issuance of pan-European bonds to help member countries respond to the pandemic.

 ??  ?? Pedro Sanchez
Pedro Sanchez

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