Arab News

Drones, helicopter­s police Easter lockdown in Italy

Govt scientists pushing for ban on public gatherings to be extended as long as possible

- Francesco Bongarra Rome

Police are using drones and helicopter­s to make sure that Italians do not defy the lockdown to travel to beaches and summer houses during the Easter long weekend.

As nearly 20,000 deaths have been reported so far in the country since the end of February, authoritie­s do not want to take any risks and have urged people to stay at home.

“We normally use those devices to chase mafia men on the run and to control the territory in highrisk operations in a discreet but effective way. But this time drones have proved to be really effective in finding those who are breaking the rules,” Inspector Pasquale Ricci from the Italian State Police told Arab News on Easter Sunday.

Ricci was speaking while setting up a drone to patrol one of the consular roads linking the center of Rome to the sandy beaches of Ostia, where people would normally be heading on a holiday weekend with good weather.

“The army gave us those devices. They told us that they were using them last time in Afghanista­n,” he said. The hovering drone, about the size of a loaf of bread, emits a mechanical buzz reminiscen­t of a wasp and shouts down instructio­ns in a tinny voice.

“Attention! You are in a prohibited area. Go home immediatel­y,” commands the device once somebody is detected on a beach or walking down a street without a reason.

“They are puzzled at the beginning, then they realize that they have been spotted and so they go home,” the policeman explained. A video of a helicopter locating a man sunbathing on a beach in Palermo has gone viral on social media. The lowering of the chopper on the beach causes a sand storm around the man, and he takes his towel and leaves.

A drone recently revealed a rave party with 20 people congregati­ng on the rooftop of a tall building in

Turin. They had decided not to have a barbecue so as not to attract attention, but the unmanned aircraft found them anyway.

“With drones we found many people who broke the lockdown and opened their summer beach or lake houses; they will be prosecuted and will pay a €400 ($440) fine each,” said Capt. Vincenzo De Filippis from the Carabinier­i, the Italian military police.

Last Friday Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte extended the lockdown till May 4, but also agreed to allow a small number of businesses that had been shuttered since March 12 to reopen from Tuesday on a trial basis.

The list of businesses includes bookstores and baby clothes shops, on the grounds that they rarely draw crowds and can more easily impose social distancing measures. Laundromat­s and dry cleaners will also be allowed to reopen for the first time in more than a month. Only grocery stores, supermarke­ts and pharmacies have been able to operate so far.

A study released by the Confcooper­ative small business lobby said that the closures have left more than half of Italy’s 1.3 million constructi­on workers and more than a third of its 11.4 million service-sector employees furloughed. Another report by the Confindust­ria big business lobby estimated that every week of Italy’s shutdown was chopping another 0.75 percent off its annual GDP.

But Italian government scientists are pushing for the ban on public gatherings to be extended as long as possible as a safety precaution.

This is why a policy of zero tolerance has been decided for the Easter holiday weekend, when people would normally go out to meet family and friends.

“I cannot stand it anymore with staying home, but we have nothing else to do,” said Giovanni while walking his dog near St. Peter’s Basilica. Dog walking is one of the few activities that Italians are allowed to leave their home for.

“At least this way I am able to take some fresh air. If I had a glass of wine I could even be pretending it is a holiday. But today it is just another day like all the others.” While Giovanni is talking, a police patrol stops him and checks his papers. “This time I am OK. Hopefully my dog will need another walk again soon so I can have some more sun and air,” he said.

Drones are also used to check the temperatur­e of people remotely after they have been spotted outdoors. A heat sensor takes the person’s temperatur­e and sends the informatio­n to a drone operator, who refers to a thermal map on his hand-held screen.

FASTFACT

A drone recently revealed a rave party with 20 people congregati­ng on the rooftop of a tall building in Turin.

 ?? AP ?? Monica Carfora, deputy head of the emergency of the Santo Spirito Hospital in Rome, holds a chocolate Easter egg as her team takes a break for a small celebratio­n.
AP Monica Carfora, deputy head of the emergency of the Santo Spirito Hospital in Rome, holds a chocolate Easter egg as her team takes a break for a small celebratio­n.
 ??  ?? Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has extended
the lockdown till May 4.
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has extended the lockdown till May 4.

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