Glasgow Times

Millions emerge from lockdown across Europe

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PLASTIC barriers and face masks appeared on the streets of Europe’s newly reopened cities, as France and Belgium emerged from lockdowns, the Netherland­s sent children back to school and Greece and Spain further eased restrictio­ns.

All faced a delicate balance of trying to restart battered economies without fuelling a second wave of coronaviru­s infections.

Social distancing was the order of the day but just how to do that on public transport and in schools was the big question.

With yesterday’s partial reopening, the French did not have to carry forms allowing them to leave their homes but crowds quickly developed at some metro stations in Paris, one of France’s viral hotspots.

A last-minute legal challenge emerged to the government’s practice of confining people to their own regions, further confusing the post-lockdown landscape.

In Paris, hairdresse­rs practised their new workflow over the weekend ahead of yesterday’s reopening, and planned to charge a “participat­ion fee” for the new disposable protective gear they will need for each customer.

Walk-in customers will be a thing of the past, said Brigitte L’Hoste, manager of the Hair de Beaute salon, who expects the number of appointmen­ts to be cut in half.

Roughly half of Spain’s 47 million people stepped into a softer version of the country’s strict confinemen­t, beginning to socialise, shop in small stores and enjoy outdoor seating in restaurant­s and bars.

Its biggest cities of Madrid and Barcelona remained under lockdown, however.

Fears about new waves of infection have been born out in Germany, where a new cluster was linked to a slaughterh­ouse; in Wuhan, the Chinese city where the virus started; and in South Korea, where a single nightclub customer was linked to 85 new infections.

The South Korean government pushed back hard against that wave, halting the school reopenings that had been planned for this week and reimposing restrictio­ns on nightclubs and bars.

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