Europe boosts virus measures as worldwide cases near 21m
UK adds France to its list of countries hit with a mandatory 2-week quarantine; New Zealand extends Auckland lockdown as virus cluster grows; Spain reports almost 3,000 cases in 24 hours
European nations among the hardest hit by the coronavirus unveiled further control moves on Friday to batle rising cases, hiting summer tourism and aspects of everyday life on the continent.
Britain added France to its list of countries hit with a mandatory two-week quarantine for returning holidaymakers from Saturday, as Paris confronts a resurgent second wave of infections.
Confirmed cases in France reached levels not seen since May on Wednesday and Thursday, at over 2,500 new cases per day.
“The indicators are bad, the signals are worrying and the situation is deteriorating... The fate of the epidemic is in our hands,” the country’s national health agency chief Jerome Salomon told France Inter radio, adding that the capital Paris and the Mediterranean port city of Marseille were especially at risk.
But he highlighted that by “mobilising, respecting infection control measures, accepting mass testing,” some areas of France had stamped out new virus clusters.
Neighbouring Spain said it would close all discos and ban smoking in the street where people are unable to stay at a safe distance, ater the country reported almost 3,000 cases in 24 hours on Thursday.
And Austria added popular Mediterranean destination Croatia to its list of at-risk countries, urging citizens to return home ahead of mandatory tests or quarantine for returnees starting Monday.
Around the world, the number of confirmed cases rose to almost 21 million according to an tally from official sources at 1100 GMT, with almost 755,000 people dead.
France and the Netherlands have now joined Spain and several other European nations on Britain’s quarantine list, having at first been granted exemptions.
Briton Paul Trower said he decided to cut short his visit to France ater receiving several messages from friends warning him of the quarantine measures.
“We looked and tried to book a ferry, cancelled our holidays and come home to avoid it because my wife works and I look ater my granddaughter,” he said.
“It was already a very bad season and now it’s going to be even worse,” said Christophe Mathieu, the chief executive of Britany Ferries which operates services between Britain, Ireland, France and Spain.
French holidaymakers in the UK will be faced with tough choices of their own, as Paris switly announced a “reciprocal measure,” although it was unclear when that might be imposed.
The Netherlands also said it would advise against all but essential travel to Britain, but will not impose a quarantine of its own for incoming travellers.
With more than 41,000 deaths caused by COVID-19, Britain is the worst-hit country in Europe and Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been criticised over his handling of the crisis.
A slew of data on Friday revealed the scale of the economic impact of the virus and punishing lockdowns, with Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, the Netherlands, Finland and Denmark all booking hety hits to GDP in April-june.
“Never before” has the Dutch economy suffered shrinkage of 8.5 per cent in a single quarter, the CBS statistics office said, while Denmark and Hungary both reported their worst slumps since the early 1990s.
Central European heavyweight Poland entered its first recession since the end of the communist era.
One bright spot was German vaccine maker Curevac, set to dip its toe into the US markets with an initial public offering raising more than $200 million.
Meanwhile Vietnam said it was looking to buy a bulk order of Russia’s “Sputnik” vaccine, although Western scientists raised concerns about the speed of its development and suggested that researchers might be cuting corners.
New Zealand is batling its own second wave of infections and extended a lockdown of its largest city Auckland by at least 12 days, giving health authorities more time to trace and contain a variant of the virus previously unseen in the country.
The Pacific island nation’s initial response to the pandemic was hailed a success, but a run of 102 days with no reported community transmission was brought to an end on Tuesday.