The Daily Telegraph

Gatherings limited to eight people under Swedish curbs

- By Richard Orange

SWEDEN is to limit gatherings in the country to a maximum of eight people in what Stefan Löfven, the prime minister, described as “an extremely interventi­onist measure which has no equivalent in modern times”.

The new tougher approach brings the Scandinavi­an nation – which in the spring imposed the lightest restrictio­ns in Europe – closer to a lockdown than at any time in the pandemic.

Those arranging public events for over eight people will face fines or even imprisonme­nt, while those holding private gatherings are strongly recommende­d to stay below the threshold.

“There should be no social situations with more than eight people, even if they are not formally covered by the law,” Mr Löfven said at a press conference yesterday.

“This is the new norm for the whole of society and the whole of Sweden. Do not go to the gym, do not go to the library, do not have dinner parties, do not have parties. Just cancel it.”

The new limit will come into force on Nov 24 and is initially expected to apply for four weeks, but in a press release the government said it was ready to extend the recommenda­tion over Christmas and the new year if necessary.

Mr Löfven said that adherence to the new restrictio­ns was essential if the current surge in infections was to be brought under control.

“This is going to get worse,” he said. “Do your duty, take your responsibi­lity to stop the spread.”

The number of people testing positive in Sweden hit a new daily record of 5,990 new cases on Friday, with the number of positive diagnoses rising by about 50 per cent a week.

The country’s public health agency began rolling out “general local recommenda­tions” to the most hard-hit regions from the middle of last month, but Lena Hallengren, Sweden’s health minister, said that the recommenda­tions, which were far-reaching but not backed by law, had not been sufficient­ly widely followed.

“Over recent weeks, the recommenda­tions have been sharpened and strong measures have been taken. Despite this, behaviour has not yet changed enough to turn the direction of the developmen­t,” she said. “The curves are still going in the wrong direction.”

The new measures should not be interprete­d as being the beginning of a hard lockdown of the sort in place in Britain and several other European countries, Mr Löfven said. “We do not believe in a total lockdown, we believe that the measures we are putting in place are the right ones,” he said.

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