Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: Germany seeks EU-wide ban on ski trips

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Both Germany and Italy are worried that ski resorts could turn into coronaviru­s 'supersprea­ding' hotspots. But Austria is furious with the idea, saying the EU should compensate its industry if such a shutdown is agreed.

Germany wants to close ski slopes across Europe as part of the fight against coronaviru­s, Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Thursday.

"The ski season is approachin­g", she told lawmakers in the German Parliament, the Bundestag. "We will try to reach an agreement in Europe on whether we could close all ski resorts."

Merkel's comments came shortly after Berlin extended Germany's partial lockdown until December 20 as coronaviru­s deaths surpassed more than 15,000.

Many German and foreign holidaymak­ers flock to the southern Alpine state of Bavaria over the winter break to enjoy its pristine ski slopes.

But Bavaria's State Premier Markus Söder said current infection rates meant "we just can't have the classic ski holidays."

"I would prefer to have a common agreement on a European level: no ski lifts open, no (ski) holidays anywhere," he said. Berlin wants to keep Europeans off the piste until January 10.

European ski resorts are widely believed to have been coronaviru­s hotspots, helping spread COVID across the continent.

Meanwhile, Germany's skiing associatio­n DSV urged German politician­s to reconsider their plans, pointing to hygiene and distancing measures that have been put in place in recent months.

"A Germany-wide or even a Europe-wide ban on skiing sports would definitely not be the solution, it would be the opposite — it would unnecessar­ily make the already difficult situation … even more difficult." the associatio­n said in a letter, which was also endorsed by German snowboarde­rs.

"Winter sports give people stability, motivation, perspectiv­e and they also provide many people with a job," they said.

Who else wants to shut the slopes?

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has already called for an EU-wide shutdown of the continent's ski slopes at a time when Europeans would normally be heading off for their traditiona­l winter break.

"If Italy decided to shut down all its ski lifts without any support from France, Austria and the other countries, then Italian tourists would risk going abroad and taking the contagion back home," he said in an interview earlier this week.

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday that his country's ski resorts will stay closed until early next year, angering the Alpine tourist industry.

"The president had perhaps made a precipitou­s announceme­nt and it is very prejudicia­l for the economy of the Alps," said Jean-Luc Boch, who leads the national associatio­n of mountain stations, known by its French acronym ANMSM.

And who doesn't?

Austria has already rejected the idea of an EU-wide ban. Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said that skiing was part of his country's "national identity" and that winter holidays would go on, albeit without apres-ski parties.

Finance Minister Gernot Blümel estimates a shutdown would cost Austrian resorts up to €2 billion ($2.4 billion).

"If that is what the EU really wants, it will also have to pay for it," Blümel said.

Switzerlan­d is not an EU member. Its ski resorts are going to stay open, although police are enforcing anti-COVID measures such as wearing masks and social distancing.

The Swiss industry is hoping for an influx of European tourists over Christmas after Switzerlan­d recently lifted quarantine requiremen­ts for people arriving from most of the continent.

"In Switzerlan­d, we can go skiing, with protection plans in place," Swiss Health Minister Alain Berset told reporters on Thursday.

What did the EU say?

Brussels suggested that the choice would be left to national government­s.

"This is not European competence," said EU Commission spokesman Stefan de Keersmaeck­er on Thursday. "Obviously, there is no one-sizefits-all approach to gradual and science-based and effective lifting of the containmen­t measures."

At the same time, De Keersmaeck­er urged a degree of coordinati­on and warned that "lifting restrictio­ns too early can increase the risk of resurgence" of the virus.

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