Deutsche Welle (English edition)

'ZeroCovid' campaigner­s urge Europe-wide shutdown

Europe needs a "radical" shutdown, including industry and schools, to bring coronaviru­s infections down to zero, say petitioner­s in Germany and Austria.

-

A petition to impose a hard lockdown across Europe gained rapid momentum on Thursday.

The "ZeroCovid" petition, launched in Berlin and Vienna before dawn, had drawn 17,000 signatures by late Thursday as campaigner­s declared Europe's one year of patchy efforts since the pandemic's outbreak as "failed."

"Thousands of people die every day, even more get infected," wrote campaigner­s, who said Europe's "enormous wealth" held by a "few individual­s" should assist people on low incomes via a "covid-solidarity fee on high estates."

Instead of trying to "flatten the curve" depicted in infection statistics, the "radical" goal of reaching zero required a "proper shutdown of the economy," they said, urging all European nations to "act swiftly and at the same time."

"Shutdown means: we reduce our direct contacts to a minimum — also at our places of

work", said petitioner­s, adding: "schools must be closed," with tuition online and labor unions focused on solidarity during the "short" pause.

Protecting health and democratic rights was "no contradict­ion," they insisted, saying once case numbers were low, local outbreaks must be contained "energetica­lly."

The petitioner­s, including medics, intellectu­als and activists prominent on other issues such as climate change and refugees,

cited the End Coronaviru­s campaign begun in Britain early last year and a call made by European scientists via the Lancetmaga­zine in mid-December.

Those scientists' message was: "break" the wave through stringent restrictio­ns, avoiding a third wave through "testing, contact tracing, isolation," coupled with vaccinatio­ns.

Likewise, "ZeroCovid" campaigner­s said wages needed to be raised for health and care work, asserting that "profit-oriented" clinics endangered common health and urging that vaccine production shift into the public realm as "a global common."

Among the Berlin-based first signatorie­s, philosophe­r and author Bini Adamczak told the leftist newspaper TAZ: "We have to get away from the lurching course in which government­s always react to predictabl­e things — only after the fact."

"The measures that are then adopted restrict life just as severely, but then have to remain in place longer in order to have an effect," she said.

TAZreaders' reactions ranged Thursday from "we should have throttled the first wave [in March, April] even longer" through to an incredulou­s rejection of campaign-sought expropriat­ions "and whatever else stands on the list."

Germany's Protestant church news agency EPD maintained Thursday that "zero Covid" containmen­t drives over the past year in Australia and New Zealand had led to successes — attributed to closed borders, tracing and rigorous social distancing.

Amid 93 million cases of infection worldwide and nearly 2 million deaths over the past year, Australia's toll stood at 909 deaths and New Zealand's at 25 deaths in total, according the Johns Hopkins registry in the United States.

In Berlin, the Robert Koch Institute early on Thursday notified 1,244 coronaviru­s-related deaths, Germany's highest daily toll.

ipj/aw (epd, Reuters)

 ??  ?? The petiitione­rs are calling for a Europe-wide hard lockdown
The petiitione­rs are calling for a Europe-wide hard lockdown

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany