The Guardian (USA)

Global report: Germany to relax travel curbs as Spain mourns Covid-19 victims

- Jon Henley and Philip Oltermann

Denmark has made it easier for crossborde­r couples separated from their partners by lockdown to meet again, while Germany is expected to allow travel to 31 European countries from mid-June, as EU countries continued to lift coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

People living in Norway, Sweden, Finland and Germany can now visit partners in Denmark by signing a simple declaratio­n rather than having to provide photos, phone records and other proof of a relationsh­ip, the Danish justice minister, Nick Haekkerup, said.

A government source in Berlin, meanwhile, told Reuters Germany was planning to lift a travel warning for its 26 fellow EU countries plus Britain, Iceland, Norway, Switzerlan­d and Liechtenst­ein from 15 June providing infection rates remain under control.

Under the proposal, the general travel warning that has been in place since 17 March would be replaced by individual advice tailored to the spread of the pandemic in each country, potentiall­y allowing Germans to holiday abroad this summer.

The premiers of Germany’s 16 states are due to discuss with the chancellor, Angela Merkel, on Wednesday how to further relax restrictio­ns aimed at containing Covid-19 after an initial relaxation appeared to have no significan­t impact on infections.

Control over lifting the measures seems to be increasing­ly slipping from Merkel’s grasp as more federal states announce unilateral steps to loosen restrictio­ns, creating a patchwork of wildly varying rules on physical distancing within the country. Winfried Kretschman­n, the premier of Baden-Württember­g, said on Tuesday his state would allow seated public events with up to 100 people from 1 June. Other states made similar announceme­nts, with the mayor of Hamburg saying the the city state would soon reopen cinemas, open-air swimming pools and gyms. There was no official confirmati­on of a report, citing a draft document, in the Bild tabloid that Merkel, under pressure from state premiers, had already agreed to ease some remaining rules – including on the numbers of visitors allowed in people’s homes – by 29 June instead of 5 July, as originally planned.

Spain will hold10 days of official mourning from Wednesday for its nearly 27,000 Covid-19 victims, the government said, with flags on public buildings to be lowered to half-mast and an official ceremony presided over by King Felipe VI.

The prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, said it would be “the longest period of mourning in our democracy, in which we will all express our sorrow and pay homage to those who have died”. A government spokeswoma­n, María Jesús Montero, said eight in 10 victims were “older than 70 – those who helped build the country we know today”.

In France, the CNIL privacy watchdog approved a government-backed mobile phone app, StopCovid, designed to alert users if they have been in contact with an infected person. The voluntary app will keep track of users over a two-week period.

Privacy defenders were concerned it marked the first step towards a surveillan­ce state, but the CNIL watchdog said the Bluetooth-based app met legal privacy requiremen­ts and contained multiple safeguards to prevent abuse. The French parliament is to vote on the matter on Wednesday and, if passed, the app could be available for download from this weekend.

Hungary aims to lift its heavily criticised state of emergency – which gave the country’s rightwing, nationalis­t prime minister, Viktor Orbán, the right to rule by decree indefinite­ly – on 20 June, its justice minister said.

The law, which Orbán said was necessary to curb the pandemic and its economic fallout, was condemned for failing to set a clear time limit on the state of emergency and for introducin­g potential prison sentences for people who spread false informatio­n.

Vladimir Putin said the epidemic had passed its peak in Russia and ordered a postponed second world war victory day parade to be held next month, with strict safety measures to be enforced to reduce the risk to participan­ts.

The postponeme­nt of the 9 May parade to celebrate 75 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany was seen as a significan­t blow to the Russian president, who had lined up world leaders including China’s Xi Jinping and Emmanuel Macron of France to attend.

“According to experts, the peak can be considered passed,” Putin told the defence minister, Sergei Shoigu. “We will do it on June 24, the day the legendary historic victors’ parade took place in 1945.”

Russia has the third-highest number of cases in the world after the US and Brazil, but despite recording its highest daily death toll of 174 on Tuesday has apparently managed to keep fatalities far lower than in countries with similar rates of infection.

In other developmen­ts on Tuesday: Coronaviru­s has infected nearly 5,530,350 people worldwide and killed more than 347,000, according to the Johns Hopkins University tracker.

A 27-year-old South Korean man was jailed for four months for twice breaking quarantine rules, the country’s first such prison sentence.

Indonesia said it was deploying 340,000 troops, including in the capital, Jakarta, to clamp down on rampant physical-distancing violations.

Thailand extended its sweeping state of emergency laws for another month until the end of June as the country starts to gradually reopen businesses.

 ?? Photograph: John MacDougall/AFP/Getty ?? A woman puts on a face mask before entering a coffee shop near the Brandenbur­g Gate in Berlin.
Photograph: John MacDougall/AFP/Getty A woman puts on a face mask before entering a coffee shop near the Brandenbur­g Gate in Berlin.
 ?? Photograph: Bernat Armangué/AP ?? Central Madrid, Spain. Ten days of national mourning will begin on Wednesday.
Photograph: Bernat Armangué/AP Central Madrid, Spain. Ten days of national mourning will begin on Wednesday.

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