Bangkok Post

Anti-lockdown rally in Vienna

- VIENNA:

Thousands turned out on Saturday for the latest protest in Vienna against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and several arrests were made for breaching public order laws and Covid regulation­s, police said.

Many of the protesters did not wear masks or observe social distancing as they made their way through the centre of the Austrian capital to a park where the far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) had called a rally.

Austria eased its latest lockdown last month and reopened schools, shops and museums.

But the demonstrat­ors voiced opposition to the restrictio­ns still in place, including the closure of restaurant­s and cafes as well as the tests that school pupils must take to attend inperson lessons.

“When measures are taken which lead to nearly a million people finding themselves unemployed or on furlough, then this destroys people economical­ly, which will obviously have long-term consequenc­es for families and for the children who live in them,” protester Christophe­r Pollack said.

Former interior minister Herbert Kickl accused the government of “dancing on the edge of lunacy” in a speech to the crowd.

“It’s all so weird and mad, no Hollywood director could make it up,” Mr Kickl said of the remaining restrictio­ns.

Demonstrat­ors chanted slogans and held placards seeking the resignatio­n of centre-right Chancellor Sebastian Kurz.

Hostility to the media was in evidence with the chant “Luegenpres­se” or “lying press” being used.

Isolated scuffles were reported between protesters and left-wing counter-demonstrat­ors, with police using tear gas to separate them on at least one occasion.

Austrian media reported that extreme-right elements, including convicted neo-Nazi Gottfried Kuessel, were seen among the crowds, as they have been at previous anti-lockdown protests.

Police said that some of the arrests were made at the end of the protest when some participan­ts refused to disperse.

Such demonstrat­ions have been increasing­ly common in recent months as citizens chafe against the continuing restrictio­ns on normal life and their economic impact.

The government has said the restrictio­ns could be further eased in the coming weeks if infections decline. However, the number of new infections has been creeping upwards in recent weeks, with more than 2,500 new cases reported on Saturday.

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