New York Daily News

Euro chaos is back

COVID surge stirs crackdown, unrest

- BY COLLEEN BARRY AND FRANCES D’EMILIO

MILAN — Protesters set trash bins afire and police responded with hydrant sprays in downtown Rome on Tuesday night, on a day of public rage against virus-fighting measures like evening shutdowns for restaurant­s and bars and the closures of gyms and theaters — a sign of growing discontent across Europe with renewed coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Pedestrian­s and motorists returning home from work in Rome were taken by surprise when protesters, some of them hooded and members of an extreme-right political group, set fire to trash bins in Piazza del Popolo, overturned parked motor scooters and mopeds and hurled smoke bombs, state TV reported. Police vans unleashed torrents of water to disperse them.

It was a fifth straight night of violent protest in Italy, following recent local overnight curfews in cities including Naples and Rome.

After protests Monday night turned violent in the financial capital of Milan, police arrested 28 people. And in Italy’s industrial northern city of Turin, at least 11 were arrested, including two who smashed the window of a Gucci boutique and stripped a mannequin of its lemon yellow trousers.

All of Europe is grappling with how to halt a fall resurgence of the virus before its hospitals become overwhelme­d again.

Nightly curfews have been implemente­d in French cities. Schools have been closed in Northern Ireland and the Czech Republic. German officials have ordered de-facto lockdowns in some areas near the Austrian border and new mask-wearing requiremen­ts are popping up weekly across the continent, including a nationwide requiremen­t in Russia.

“We would all like to live like before, but there are moments where you have to make tough decisions,” French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said Tuesday as the government held emergency meetings on the pandemic.

Yet in this new round of restrictio­ns, government­s are finding a less compliant public, even as the continent has seen over 250,000 confirmed deaths in the pandemic and last week recorded 46% of the world’s new infections, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Over the weekend, police used pepper spray against protesters angry over new virus restrictio­ns in Poland. Spanish doctors staged their first national walkout in 25 years on Tuesday to protest poor working conditions.

In Britain, anger and frustratio­n at the government’s uneven handling of the pandemic has erupted into a political crisis over the issue of hungry children.

Scrambling to ease some of the financial pain caused by the latest restrictio­ns on businesses, Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte’s cabinet approved $5.8 billio in economic relief.

The measures included ex- tending unemployme­nt benefits for unionized workers for up to six weeks, through January, financial aid for restaurant­s, cafes, hotels, gyms and ice cream parlors, taxi drivers and other sectors already hit hard by the lockdown earlier this year, and now reeling under the new restrictio­ns with some businesses in danger of folding.

Also allocated were one-time 1,000-euro ($1,180) payments to free-lancers in the entertainm­ent industry, pummeled by the cinema and theater closure, which lasts at least a month.

Conte said the alternativ­e was another national lockdown to avoid overwhelmi­ng the national health service. Italy registered more than 22,000 infections since the previous day.

Aiming to avoid lockdown, “we tried to assemble a series of measures with surgical precision with the awareness they would have had a negative impact,” Conte said.

On Tuesday, a dozen restau- rant owners protested in front of Milan’s city hall while as many stadium concession stand owners waved banners at the Lombardy regional headquarte­rs.

“No one has thought of us,” said Giacomo Errico, the Lombardy president of FIVA Commercio representi­ng 6,000 concession stand owners in the northern region, among 40,000 nationwide, that have been out of work since February.

Such peaceful protests have been staged up and down the Italian peninsula, while more violent protests erupting at night, increasing­ly culminatin­g with vandalism, looting and clashes with police.

Italy’s national prosecutor for terrorism and organized crime, Federico Cafiero de Raho, on Tuesday said subversive­s had infiltrate­d peaceful protests in the country. He said they included proponents of the extreme right and anarchists on the extreme left.

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 ??  ?? Police in Italy (main photo and below) struggle to control protests over renewed COVID restrictio­ns prompted by a surge of the deadly disease.
Police in Italy (main photo and below) struggle to control protests over renewed COVID restrictio­ns prompted by a surge of the deadly disease.

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