China Daily

Europe begins slow process of revival

- Julian Shea in London, Ren Qi in Moscow, Xinhua and agencies contribute­d to this story.

A gradual reopening of businesses began taking place in some European countries on Tuesday, albeit with caution, as these countries believe they are seeing a flattening of the COVID-19 curve or a plateau.

The novel coronaviru­s had infected 827,180 people and claimed 81,480 lives in Europe as of Wednesday, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

Small shops and hardware stores in Austria reopened on Tuesday as the first step toward a “new normal” amid the pandemic. As of Tuesday morning, shops of up to 400 square meters and hardware stores in the Alpine country have reopened under strict precaution­ary measures such as mask-wearing and social distancing.

Austria reported 14,159 cases and 384 deaths by Tuesday, according to health authoritie­s.

“We are on track,” said Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, who believed “the numbers of new infections and hospitaliz­ations are going in the right direction”. However, masks are mandatory in retail and public transport, he emphasized.

Italy on Tuesday took its first tentative steps toward reopening its economy five weeks after the national lockdown entered into force.

Italy’s civil protection agency reported 2,972 new cases in the last 24 hours on Tuesday, the lowest number since March 13. The country has registered 162,488 infections, according to health authoritie­s.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte last Friday formally extended the coast-to-coast quarantine from April 13 to May 3. However, the new decree did allow a few businesses to reopen on Tuesday. Among them: stores selling clothes and equipment for small children, those selling products for pets, book shops, dry cleaners, and electronic­s stores.

Return to work

Spain is flattening the curve on the spread of the virus, the government said on Tuesday. The country is handing out 10 million free masks from Monday to Thursday this week to commuters going back to work after a two-week lockdown that forced all non-essential workers to stay home.

From Monday, non-essential workers such as constructi­on staff returned to work. Meanwhile, the rest of the country remains under lockdown until April 26.

Meanwhile, the European Commission on Tuesday urged member states to coordinate as they begin to ease lockdown measures, warning that failure to do so could result in new spikes of the outbreak.

The United Kingdom’s death toll has passed 12,000 as concerns grow about fatalities occurring away from hospitals and being excluded from the daily figures.

Figures released on Tuesday revealed that a further 778 patients had died in UK hospitals during the latest 24-hour period, taking the nationwide total to 12,107. Informatio­n released by the Office for National Statistics suggested the real number is considerab­ly higher, as this total only includes deaths in hospitals.

Russia reported 24,490 infections and 198 deaths, the anti-coronaviru­s crisis center reported on Wednesday. And Vladimir Nikiforov, chief infection diseases doctor of the Russian Medical Biological Agency, said the morbidity growth in Russia is to slow down by the end of this week if the pandemic follows reasonable epidemiolo­gy rules.

Separately, Russian President Vladimir Putin called for internatio­nal cooperatio­n to fight the virus.

He proposed that countries begin developmen­t of systemic measures designed to create conditions for restoring and ensuring further economic developmen­t within the framework of some internatio­nal mechanisms, such as the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council.

 ?? MASSIMO PINCA / REUTERS ?? A worker checks the temperatur­e of a customer at the entrance of a supermarke­t in Turin, Italy, on Tuesday, as the spread of the novel coronaviru­s continues.
MASSIMO PINCA / REUTERS A worker checks the temperatur­e of a customer at the entrance of a supermarke­t in Turin, Italy, on Tuesday, as the spread of the novel coronaviru­s continues.

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