The Denver Post

Virus forces Europeans to ask: How united do we want to be?

- By Joseph Wilson and Angela Charlton

Europe’s fractured union came under new pressure this weekend, as Italy and Spain pleaded for urgent European help to withstand the virus ordeal but Germany showed reluctance to plunge into any radical new solutions.

The north-south divide that has dogged the European Union for years has resurfaced as the virus has galloped across the continent, claiming more lives than any other region in the world.

“It is the most difficult moment for the EU since its foundation, and it has to be ready to rise to the challenge,” Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said in a televised address Saturday night.

Sánchez warned them that a lack of solidarity to share the financial burden of the health crisis and the imminent economic slowdown will put the future of the bloc in danger.

“Europe must provide a united social and economic response. We must have evidence that Europe listens and that Europe takes action.”

Europeans have shown some signs of solidarity: Germany and Switzerlan­d are treating the sick from Italy and France. Germany and France sent masks and hospital shirts to Italy. And the EU has pledged billions in aid.

But given the scale of this drama, critics say that’s not nearly enough.

Meanwhile, China and Russia have made a point of sending medical aid to Italy, making some Italians question where their allegiance­s should lie. Cuba and Albania have sent medical teams too.

‘’Europe must demonstrat­e that it is able to respond to this historic call,’’ Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte said late Saturday. “I will fight until the last drop of sweat, until the last gram of energy, to obtain a strong, vigorous, cohesive European response.”

Spain and Italy alone account for more than half of the world’s death toll, with hundreds of new victims every day.

Sánchez warned that the bloc’s southern members can’t bear another round of the hard-love austerity applied in the 2008 recession, when countries such as Greece and Portugal were forced to request a bailout and slash their budgets and social services.

“We must not repeat the mistakes of past crises, otherwise the next debt crisis risks coming right after corona,” Austrian Finance Minister Gernot Bluemel told the Austria Press Agency on Sunday. “We should use the existing instrument­s before we build new constructi­ons that have long-term effects” on European economic stability.

This time, Spain, Italy, France and six other EU members have asked the union to share the burden of European debt, dubbed “coronabond­s,” to help fight the virus. But the idea has met resistance.

German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said Sunday that it’s important to ensure that “countries can better carry this difficult task and the extra credit they have to take on.”

Scholz said European coordinati­on is essential, but dodged a question about coronabond­s. Instead, he stressed that countries are discussing mobilizing money from the eurozone rescue fund created amid Europe’s debt crisis a decade ago, the European Stability Mechanism.

“That is a very concrete contributi­on to solidarity in this difficult situation,” he said.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen also appeared unenthusia­stic about coronabond­s, referring to them as “just a slogan” in a weekend interview with German news agency dpa. That prompted dismay in Italy.

But Germany is not alone in urging caution. The Netherland­s and Finland have similar reservatio­ns about unleashing new aid that would have long-term impact on Europe’s collective finances. Some want to save money in case the crisis gets even worse.

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