Daily Press

As Europe’s cases rise, so do doubters

More are calling for ‘no more’ lies, masks or lockdown

- By Megan Specia

LONDON — Alongside a strip of candy-colored houses on London’s Portobello Road, a freshly scrawled message blared out from the older graffiti on a garage door: “Take off your mask!”

The sentiment echoed that of thousands of unmasked protesters who packed Trafalgar Square in the center of the city on Saturday, and a week earlier, rallying against Britain’s coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. Many called the pandemic a hoax — even as the global death toll neared 1 million.

“No more lies, no more masks, no more lockdown,” one sign read.

In Berlin, Brussels, Dublin and Paris, similar gatherings have gone ahead in recent weeks as coronaviru­s cases are again rising across much of Europe. But with health experts warning that a second wave has already arrived in some places and with many government­s moving to reintroduc­e restrictio­ns, the ranks of those dismissing the dangers of the virus and others calling it a government-led hoax have swelled.

Daniel Jolley, a senior lecturer in psychology at Northumbri­a University and an expert in conspiracy theories, said the emergence of a growing, vocal contingent of people who believed government­s were not being truthful about the pandemic was unsurprisi­ng.

“People are drawn to conspiracy theories in times of crisis,” Jolley said. “When there is something happening — a virus outbreak, rapid political change, the death of a celebrity, a terrorist attack — it breeds conspiracy theories.”

The prolonged nature of the pandemic and the prospect of a new round of government restrictio­ns, he believes, have only deepened that distrust and potentiall­y spurred on the naysayers.

“People are trying to understand the world in which we live,” he said, whether or not that explanatio­n is rooted in reality. “But when you have this belief, you hold on to it, and you ascribe to evidence that supports your viewpoint.”

This was the mentality on display at recent protests against the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns that have popped up in cities across Europe, which have at times turned violent. On Saturday, at least four police officers were injured in clashes in Trafalgar Square.

At another protest in the square a week earlier, Kate Shemirani — a nurse placed on an interim suspension by Britain’s Nursing Council this summer after complaints about her claims that the coronaviru­s is fake or linked to 5G mobile networks, and about her outspoken anti-vaccine stance — told the crowd: “They want you all wearing a mask, there’s no science behind that mask. That mask is going to make you sick.”

Science has long shown that wearing a mask can prevent a person from spreading airborne illness, and new research suggests that it also protects the person wearing it. But Shemirani, and many others, are unswayed.

The movement has attracted some prominent supporters. This month, singer Van Morrison released three new lockdown protest songs, recorded in Belfast and England in recent weeks, criticizin­g the government’s measures but also claiming scientists are “making up crooked facts” about the virus.

Northern I re l a nd’s health minister, Robin Swann, called the songs “dangerous” in a BBC radio interview.

“I don’t know where he gets his facts,” Swann said of

the new songs. “I know where the emotions are on this, but I will say that sort of messaging is dangerous.”

In France, where infections have skyrockete­d with a daily average of 12,000 new cases reported over the past week, critics have questioned the effectiven­ess of masks and new measures to control the

spread, while others have urged people to ignore the government’s guidance entirely.

A study released in early September by Fondation Jean Jaurès, a Paris-based research institute, found that many opponents of mask-wearing believed it was useless or dangerous to their health and a tool of

oppression by the government. As many as 90% of the anti-maskers surveyed — and 43% of the wider French population — believed that the country’s Health Ministry was colluding with pharmaceut­ical companies to hide informatio­n about the harmfulnes­s of vaccines.

Around 200 people demonstrat­ed in Brussels against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in early September, taking particular aim at mask requiremen­ts. The protest was the second organized in the Belgian capital by a fringe group called “Viruswaanz­in,” or “Virus Madness,” and was quickly dispersed by police.

The group, which staged similar protests in the Netherland­s, does not deny the existence of COVID-19 but believes that measures taken by the government­s are “disproport­ionate to the scale and threat of the disease,” said Michael Verstraete­n, one of the organizers, in an interview with Radio 2.

Verstraete­n, a lawyer, is representi­ng a group of Belgian citizens who sued the government for infringing on their freedoms by imposing coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. The presiding judge dismissed the case in July, saying that “the intellectu­al poverty of their argument is mind-boggling.”

An estimated 50,000 attended a protest in Berlin last month, among them some far-right extremists and QAnon conspiracy theorists. Yet the group that organized the event, Querdenken-711, tends to be more moderate, for the most part claiming that the severity of the virus is overblown.

Similar threads can be seen throughout many of the protests in Europe, with links to similar conspiracy theories in the United States, and experts agree that the protests seem to be gaining strength. But they warn that the growing support for these once fringe theories poses a growing threat.

Jolley, the conspiracy theory expert, warned that while it was easy to dismiss such theories, their adherents could have a real effect on public health.

“If people don’t vaccinate or wear their masks,” he cautioned, “that is going to impact us all, not just individual­s.”

 ?? JUSTIN TALLIS/GETTY-AFP ?? A protester holds up a sign Saturday in Trafalgar Square in London at a “We Do Not Consent!” rally against coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n and government restrictio­ns.
JUSTIN TALLIS/GETTY-AFP A protester holds up a sign Saturday in Trafalgar Square in London at a “We Do Not Consent!” rally against coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n and government restrictio­ns.

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