Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
While Swiss ski slopes bustle, neighboring regions grumble
GENEVA — Two weeks after beating COVID-19, Thierry Salamin huffs as his ski boots crunch through Swiss snow near the Matterhorn peak, readying for a downhill run with his mood as bright as his blue and fluorescent yellow ski getup and the sun overhead.
The 31-year-old real estate agent from the southwestern Swiss region of Wallis can’t believe he is skiing during a pandemic, let alone one that he personally endured — and which has driven a wedge between his country and its Alpine neighbors over where people can ski and where they can’t.
While the coronavirus resurgence has led Austria, France and Italy to shut or severely restrict access to their ski stations this holiday season, Switzerland has kept its slopes open — a move that has fanned grumbling about an unlevel playing field when it comes to Alpine fun.
“It’s true: We’re privileged,” said Salamin, gushing about the “paradise” of the Zermatt slopes and gesturing over the ridgeline toward
Italy. “It’s too bad that people can’t go skiing on the Italian side, because those slopes are magnificent.”
The discord among countries during the worst pandemic in a century cuts across issues of health, business, economy, culture and well-being. But it also violates one of the key tenets that the World Health Organization promotes to help fight COVID-19: solidarity.
The Swiss say they are taking reasonable action to fight the coronavirus. As across much of Europe, infection counts in Switzerland spiked in late October and peaked at more than 10,000 per day on two occasions about a month ago — a high tally for the country of 8.5 million.
Authorities require masks in ski lifts and queues and recommend hand hygiene and physical distancing measures.
France’s government is all but taking aim at Switzerland, which is not a member of the European Union, warning that any residents of France who come back from ski holidays could face virus tests and quarantine orders.