Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Virus rebels from France to Florida flout lockdown practices

- By Elaine Ganley

PARIS » Young German adults hold “corona parties” and cough toward older people. A Spanish man leashes a goat to go for a walk to skirt confinemen­t orders. From France to Florida to Australia, kitesurfer­s, college students and others crowd the beaches.

Their defiance of lockdown mandates and scientific advice to fight the coronaviru­s pandemic has prompted crackdowns by authoritie­s on people trying to escape cabin fever brought on by virus restrictio­ns. In some cases, the virus rebels resist — threatenin­g police as officials express outrage over public gatherings that could spread the virus.

“Some consider they’re little heroes when they break the rules,” said French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner. “Well, no. You’re an imbecile, and especially a threat to yourself.”

After days of noncomplia­nce by people refusing to stay home and venture out only for essential tasks, France on Friday sent security forces into train stations to prevent people from traveling to their vacation homes, potentiall­y carrying the virus to the countrysid­e or beaches where medical facilities are less robust. The popular Paris walkway along the Seine River was closed and a nightly curfew was imposed in the French Mediterran­ean city of Nice by Mayor Christian Estrosi, who is infected with the virus.

Florida’s governor closed all of the state’s beaches after images of rowdy spring break college crowds appeared on TV for days amid the rising global death toll, which surpassed 13,000 on Sunday. Australia closed Sydney’s famous Bondi Beach after police were outraged at pictures of the crowds.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Saturday that people from 18-to-49 account for more than half of the state’s coronaviru­s cases, warning them “you’re not Superman, and you’re not Superwoman.”

Many people were not complying with social distancing recommenda­tions to stay away from each other in New York City’s vast city park network ahead of a ban on congregati­ng in groups that goes into effect Sunday night, Cuomo said.

“You can wind up hurting someone who you love, or hurting someone wholly inadverten­tly. Social distancing works, and you need social distancing everywhere,”

Cuomo warned.

As new coronaviru­s cases in China dropped to zero several days in a row, the chief medical officer for the Internatio­nal Clinic of Wuhan was alarmed at those elsewhere refusing to follow rules to contain the virus. Dr. Philippe Klein said people should look to China’s confinemen­t of tens of millions as an example to emulate “with courage, with patience, with solidarity.”

“I exhort you, the French, to apply the rules in our way,” said Klein, who is French.

Worldwide, over 307,000 people have been infected. For most, the coronaviru­s causes only mild or moderate symptoms. But it can cause more severe illness in others, especially older adults and people with existing health conditions. Some 92,000 people have recovered, mostly in China, where the virus first struck late last year.

The virus rebels tend to range from restless teens to wealthy adults who can travel to their getaway homes. Even in Italy, where the virus death toll soared beyond China’s last week, authoritie­s are still trying to rein in people from going outside for fresh air, sun and visits with friends to escape walled-in lives.

French farmers’ markets where people congregate to shop for food have posed a special challenge for police trying to keep people apart from each other at the recommende­d 2 meters (6 feet), along with neglected urban housing projects where distrust and disobedien­ce of authoritie­s runs deep.

In Clichy-Sous-Bois, a Paris suburb where nationwide riots triggered by police harassment allegation­s erupted in 2005, a person bit a police officer trying to enforce confinemen­t rules, said Linda Kebbab, a police union spokespers­on. And a large crowd threatened to spit on officers who had planned to disperse them in the southeaste­rn city of Lyon but left instead, she said.

In the southern German state of Bavaria, Gov. Markus Soeder lamented that “there are still corona parties, there are young people who cough at older people and shout corona for fun and, above all, there are an incredible number of groups being formed.”

National police in Spain, which has the second-highest number of coronaviru­s infections in Europe after Italy, are using helicopter­s to spot groups of people meeting up outdoors. Then agents are sent in to break up the gatherings.

 ?? MIC SMITH—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Despite warnings from government officials take caution and self distance because of coronaviru­s, beach goers enjoy the Isle of Palms beach, Friday, March 20, 2020, in Isle of Palms, S.C. City authoritie­s are restrictin­g access to the popular beach from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily starting Saturday to help stop the spread of the coronaviru­s.
MIC SMITH—ASSOCIATED PRESS Despite warnings from government officials take caution and self distance because of coronaviru­s, beach goers enjoy the Isle of Palms beach, Friday, March 20, 2020, in Isle of Palms, S.C. City authoritie­s are restrictin­g access to the popular beach from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily starting Saturday to help stop the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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