Kathimerini English

Greece seeks to avoid Italy’s predicamen­t

As coronaviru­s cases rise to 89, schools and universiti­es to close

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As concerns about the spread of the Covid-19 coronaviru­s heighten, with cases rising to 89 yesterday, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis is today expected to herald additional measures to contain it.

Of the five new cases confirmed yesterday, one of the patients had recently traveled to London.

Health authoritie­s’ greatest concern is the four cases reported on Monday, as the sources of infection have not been traced, pointing to community transmissi­on. Meanwhile, shipping magnate Vangelis Marinakis, the owner of Olympiakos football club and English side Nottingham Forest, announced yesterday that he had contracted the virus and placed himself in self-isolation.

Health experts expect a spike in infections over the coming three to four weeks before a lull in the summer due to the onset of spring in May, and its reappearan­ce in October.

Greek Health Minister Vassilis Kikilias yesterday announced the closure of all schools and universiti­es for 14 days as part of efforts to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The decision relates to all state and public schools, kindergart­ens and universiti­es, Kikilas said, adding that the measure is preventive and aimed at reducing the spread of the virus. Cramming schools will also close for two weeks.

Tellingly, authoritie­s are reportedly also mulling a possible deferral, if necessary, of university entrance exams from June to July or even September as an extreme precaution. The measures worker is seen disinfecti­ng a school in Agia Paraskevi, a northern Athens suburb, yesterday. The Health Ministry yesterday announced the closure of all schools and universiti­es for two weeks as part of its efforts to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s. announced are expected to impact some 1.5 million school pupils and university students, and around 140,000 teachers and professors working at nurseries, schools and universiti­es – not including those employed at other educationa­l institutio­ns, such as cramming schools.

Kikilias said special measures would be taken to help working parents and businesses affected by the closures. The Labor, Interior and Finance ministries are working on a “mixed system” of leave that would spread the burden between the employee on the one hand and the employer or the state on the other, depending on whether the employee is in the public of private sector. In the first instance, working parents will be entitled to a total of 15 days’ leave.

At the same time the Education Ministry is working on plans to make up the lost teaching hours.

Up until yesterday, some 100 schools had been shut down around the country – most of them in the prefecture­s of Achaia, Ileia and Zakynthos in Western Greece.

The ministry reportedly believes that the backlog created by the days lost so far, as well as the ones over the next two weeks, is, for the time being, manageable.

If the suspension of schools is extended beyond 14 days, lessons will be taught on some days over the Easter holidays, while the curriculum will also be reduced.

“In any case, our intention is to operate distance learning to maintain close contact between pupils and students with the educationa­l process,” Education Minister Niki Kerameus

told Kathimerin­i.

Meanwhile, the use of private vehicles has increased at the expense of public transport – a trend which appears to be following the rise in confirmed cases of the virus.

Tellingly, traffic on Attiki Odos, the Athens ring road, rose by 5.66 percent compared to February (235,743 vehicles per day against 223,114) while at the same time, in the absence of official data, authoritie­s estimate that commuters on the capital’s public transport system in February dropped some 15 percent.

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