San Diego Union-Tribune

EUROPEAN LEADERS FACE CORONAVIRU­S RESURGENCE

Death tolls rising, raising the grim prospect of further lockdowns

- BY MARK LANDLER LONDON Landler writes for The New York Times.

From France to Russia, from Britain to the Czech Republic, European leaders are confrontin­g a surge in coronaviru­s cases that is rapidly filling hospital beds, driving up death tolls and raising the grim prospect of further lockdowns in countries already traumatize­d by the pandemic.

The continent, which once compared favorably to the United States in its handling of the pandemic, is being engulfed by a second wave of infection. With an average of more than 100,000 new infections per day over the past week, Europe now accounts for about one-third of new cases reported worldwide.

In the most vivid sign of the deteriorat­ing situation, President Emmanuel Macron of France on Wednesday imposed a curfew of 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. in the Paris region and eight other metropolit­an areas, beginning Saturday. “The virus is everywhere in France,” he told the French public as he declared a state of emergency.

The resurgence has prompted officials to close bars and clubs in Prague and Liverpool, England, and to make face masks mandatory in public indoor spaces in Amsterdam. In Russia, which reported its largest daily increase in infections Wednesday, President Vladimir Putin sought refuge from the torrent of bad news by announcing that his government had approved a second vaccine.

Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany better captured the anxious mood when she said Tuesday, “I am watching with great concern the renewed increase in infection numbers in almost every part of Europe.” Merkel added, “We mustn’t throw away what we achieved via restrictio­ns over the past months.”

To some extent, Europe’s setback is hardly a surprise. Public health experts have long warned that the virus could roar back when the days grew colder, driving people indoors, where the risk of transmissi­on is far greater.

In several European countries, lockdowns were lifted abruptly, sowing complacenc­y among people who felt they could return to their normal lives. In the face of intense political pressures, European leaders have been reluctant to impose new, economical­ly damaging lockdowns, often opting for the lightest possible measures.

For Germany and a handful of its neighbors, this second wave is particular­ly demoralizi­ng because they had navigated the first wave relatively well. In late June, revelers in Prague celebrated the end of the outbreak with a dinner party stretching across the Charles Bridge. Spain and Italy, which were hard hit in March and April, threw open their doors to vacationer­s in July and August.

Now, with these countries experienci­ng an alarming spread of the virus, the carefree days of summer are a distant memory.

On Wednesday, Merkel and Macron announced a raft of nationwide restrictio­ns in their countries, ranging from the closing of bars and restaurant­s to the mandatory use of masks. The curfews in Paris and other French cities, including Lyon, Toulouse and Marseille, will last at least four weeks.

“We haven’t lost control,” Macron insisted. “We are in a situation that is worrying that justifies being neither inactive nor panicked.”

Germany reported 5,132 new infections Tuesday, up from 2,639 a week earlier; France reported 120,000 new cases over the past seven days, one of the highest rates in the world.

French officials warned that in the Paris region, intensive care units would be 70 percent to 90 percent filled with COVID-19 patients by the end of the month. The surge in cases has thrown into disarray Macron’s plan to shift his focus to economic recovery, with a fiscal stimulus plan worth 100 billion euros ($117 billion).

“All of the government’s strategy is destabiliz­ed,” said Jérôme Fourquet, a political analyst at the IFOP polling institute. Macron’s ambitions, he said, were “colliding with the necessity to put out the fire, from a health standpoint.”

In the Spanish region of Catalonia, where cases have risen 40 percent in the past week, authoritie­s closed bars and restaurant­s for 15 days, except for takeout food. Shops were told to limit their traffic to 30 percent of capacity.

“We are in an extremely complicate­d situation,” the acting regional leader of Catalonia, Pere Aragonès, said on Twitter.

In the Navarre region in northern Spain, which has in recent days superseded Madrid as the area with the country’s highest official infection rate, new restrictio­ns came into force Tuesday that included closing playground­s and outdoors sports areas, as well forcing restaurant­s to close at 10 p.m.

In the Netherland­s, where the number of cases almost doubled this week to 44,000, the government announced a limited lockdown. After 10 p.m. Wednesday, all bars and restaurant­s will be closed for at least four weeks. Gatherings will be limited to 30 people, while most sports events will be halted.

In Britain, which has suffered the greatest number of virus deaths in Europe, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has walked a tightrope between scientific advisers who are pushing for another nationwide lockdown and members of his Conservati­ve Party who warn that such a draconian response would wreck the economy.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAUL­T GETTY IMAGES ?? Screens display French President Emmanuel Macron as he imposes a curfew of 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. in the Paris region and eight other metropolit­an areas.
CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAUL­T GETTY IMAGES Screens display French President Emmanuel Macron as he imposes a curfew of 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. in the Paris region and eight other metropolit­an areas.

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