Arab Times

Stockholm is outlier in virus restrictio­ns

Streets quiet, not deserted

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STOCKHOLM, March 30, (AP): The streets are quiet but not deserted. People still sit at outdoor cafes in the center of Sweden’s capital. Vendors still sell flowers. Teenagers still chat in groups in parks. Some still greet each other with hugs and handshakes.

After a long, dark Scandinavi­an winter, the coronaviru­s pandemic is not keeping Swedes at home even while citizens in many parts of the world are sheltering in place and won’t find shops or restaurant­s open on the few occasions they are permitted to venture out.

Swedish authoritie­s have advised the public to practice social distancing and to work from home, if possible, and urged those over age 70 to self-isolate as a precaution. Yet compared to the lockdowns imposed elsewhere in the world, the government’s response to the virus allows a liberal amount of personal freedom.

Standing at bars has been banned in Sweden, but restaurant customers can still be served at tables instead of having to take food to go. High schools and universiti­es are closed, but preschools and primary schools are still running classes in person.

“Sweden is an outlier on the European scene, at least,” said Johan Giesecke, the country’s former chief epidemiolo­gist and now adviser to the Swedish Health Agency, a government body. “And I think that’s good.”

Other European nations “have taken political, unconsider­ed actions” instead of ones dictated by science, Giesecke asserted.

It remains unclear how long Sweden’s exceptiona­l state will last.

Prime Minister Stefan Lofven, warning of “many tough weeks and months ahead,” announced Friday that as of Sunday, gatherings would be limited to 50 people instead of 500. The government noted that weddings, funerals and Easter celebratio­ns would be affected.

Still, to reduce the spread of the virus in Germany and the U.K., groups larger than two are currently prohibited unless they are composed of people who already live together. Officials in Italy and France introduced increasing­ly restrictiv­e limits on public activities and eventually authorized fines because they said too many people ignored social distancing recommenda­tions.

For now, the Swedish government maintains that citizens can be trusted to exercise responsibi­lity for the greater good and will stay home if they experience any COVID-19 symptoms. Many Swedes are indeed keeping the recommende­d distance from others.

Victoria Holmgren, 24, praised the Swedish government’s handling of the public health crisis as “very good.”

“And it’s partly because I don’t think I could manage being inside the whole day,” Holmgren said.

But some scientists have criticized the Swedish Public Health Agency’s approach as irresponsi­ble during a worldwide pandemic that has already killed over 21,000 people in Europe. In an open letter to the government, some 2,000 academics called for greater transparen­cy and more justificat­ion for its infection prevention strategy.

Sten Linnarsson, a professor at Karolinska Institute, a prominent medical university in Sweden, said the concern centers on “the assessment­s and the course that the Swedish government has taken through this epidemic, and especially because there is really a lack of scientific evidence being put forward for these policies.”

Linnarsson compared Sweden’s handling of the virus to letting a kitchen fire burn with the intent of extinguish­ing it later.

“That doesn’t make any sense. And the danger, of course, is that it burns the whole house down,” he said.

Sweden’s current chief epidemiolo­gist, Anders Tegnell, argued that even if the country’s comparativ­ely permissive policies are an anomaly, they are more sustainabl­e and effective in protecting the public’s health than “drastic” moves like closing schools for four or five months.

Sweden, a nation of 10 million, had a total of 3,447 confirmed virus cases and and 105 deaths by Sunday, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally. However, there has been limited testing, with some 24,500 tests conducted by Wednesday, according to official statistics.

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