Oman Daily Observer

Europe’s forces squeezed as infections balloon

- TANGI SALAÜN

Military forces across Europe have scaled back operations and imposed stricter rules on personnel to try to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s among staff who often live and work in close quarters, making them more vulnerable to infection. Preventing the virus’ proliferat­ion among the military is important both for national security and because specialist army, navy and airforce units are being drafted in to help government­s tackle the virus in many countries.

Germany mobilised 15,000 soldiers to help local authoritie­s tackle the crisis, for example, while Poland activated thousands of troops to patrol streets under lockdown, disinfect hospitals and support border control, its defence ministry said.

Events aboard the US aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt have highlighte­d the risk of the disease spreading rapidly among personnel. The nuclearpow­ered vessel with 5,000 crew is now docked in Guam, a US territory, so everyone can be tested.

The US Navy has relieved the ship’s captain of his command after he wrote a letter flagging concerns about a lack of proper measures to contain the highly infectious disease.

In France, Italy and Spain, among the nations hardest hit by the outbreak, military operations have been curtailed or in some cases suspended.

Germany has changed rules, with no roll-calls or mustering of troops and the quarantini­ng of some staff, while Turkish armed forces have imposed social distancing in mess rooms and dormitorie­s, among other measures.

On Sunday, Turkey said it was limiting troop movements in Syria as cases of the coronaviru­s jumped.

“We have had to cancel non-essential maritime missions and deployment­s, or modify their scope,” said French army command spokesman Colonel Frederic Barbry, adding that there had as yet been no impact on “operationa­l capability”.

In eastern France, 600 military personnel have contracted the virus, the defence minister said last Friday, while four soldiers serving with the Barkhane operation against militants in West Africa are also infected.

“There will be an impact from this crisis, not only in the resources available for defence and security but in how those resources are distribute­d,” said Malcolm Chalmers, deputydire­ctor of the Royal United Services Institute, a think-tank.

Testing of military personnel is critical, but it is unclear how widespread it is.

Britain, France and Turkey declined to say how many military personnel had been tested or had contracted COVID-19, the disease the coronaviru­s causes.

The Italian defence ministry would only give informatio­n on officers, saying Chief of Staff Salvatore Farina and a dozen others had tested positive. One lieutenant-colonel has died.

In Spain, which stands second behind the United States for the number of infections at more than 130,000, the defence ministry said 230 personnel had tested positive, while some 3,000 military staff are in selfisolat­ion.

Spain’s chief of defence staff, Air Force General Miguel Angel Villarroya, said no naval operations had been affected by the virus, but the replacemen­t of staff serving with the EU’S Atalanta operation off the Horn of Africa had been interrupte­d.

“We had to postpone and repatriate the staff who were to replace those on the mission because we found a person infected with the virus,” he said.

A spokesman for the German defence ministry said around 250 soldiers were infected, with fewer than 10 hospitalis­ed.

Among them are a handful of soldiers serving with a Nato mission in Lithuania, where they act as a deterrence against Russian interferen­ce. A military spokesman said manoeuvres had been suspended because of the coronaviru­s, even if the main objective of the mission remained in place.

German troops going to Afghanista­n are being put in 14 days of self-isolation first, while four Italian soldiers deployed to Kabul tested positive when they arrived. Some 200 of the 800 Italian soldiers deployed in Iraq are returning home.

But as infections may be starting to peak in Europe, a core concern is ensuring military personnel seconded to combat the virus are not themselves infected.

British authoritie­s have been criticised for shortcomin­gs in testing, with only around 65,000 tests conducted as of April 2 among a population of 66 million.

The health secretary has promised 100,000 tests a day by the end of the month.— Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? Soldiers patrol an empty Saint Mark’s Square on Palm Sunday in Venice, Italy.
— Reuters Soldiers patrol an empty Saint Mark’s Square on Palm Sunday in Venice, Italy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman