The Niagara Falls Review

Virus fears keep guests trapped in sunny ‘luxurious prison’

- ARITZ PARRA

MADRID — They signed up for a bit of a beach holiday to break up the winter. Instead, hundreds of holidaymak­ers, mainly from northern Europe, are set for a two-week lock-down as a result of an outbreak of the new coronaviru­s.

Holidaymak­ers in Tenerife, one of the most popular year-round destinatio­ns in the Canary Islands, will only be able to have an occasional dip in one of the many pools at the 4-star hotel that has been jokingly termed a “luxurious prison.”

There’ll be lots of time to watch box-sets or read a series of page-turners. All part of a holiday experience for sure, but this isn’t what the guests, a large chunk of whom are from Britain and Belgium, had in mind when they signed up for some winter release in the archipelag­o that’s closer to Africa’s northweste­rn coast than to Spain.

Close physical contact has been discourage­d over contagion fears after the virus that originated in China arrived in the Canary Island’s resort this week via Italy.

“The situation is improving. Today they reopened the restaurant. We can circulate freely, sunbathe. But we can’t come out of the hotel,” said Paolo Martelli, an 89-yearold Italian pensioner from Milan who is staying at the H10 Costa Adeje Palace Hotel with his wife, Laura.

“There is overall a feeling like we are in a luxurious prison,” the pensioner said, adding that he worries about missing the plane back home next Saturday.

“The worse thing is the uncertaint­y of not knowing what they are going to do with us.”

Authoritie­s in Tenerife said Wednesday that 106 of the 723 guests at the resort could be released in coming hours because they had no direct contact with the four holidaymak­ers who tested positive for the COVID-19 disease.

The infected are a doctor from the northern Italian region where a cluster of the virus has led to hundreds of infections, his wife and two more in the party of 10 Italians vacationin­g together in Tenerife.

The remaining 600 or so customers from 25 countries, will need to remain quarantine­d for 14 days, Teresa Cruz, the health regional ministry in the Canary Islands told a news conference.

She added that hotel workers are being allowed to rotate in shifts, and those among the staff who leave the premises will need to remain under official surveillan­ce at home.

The islands are also famous for their carnivals.

The H10 hotel had planned celebratio­ns this week, but its website on Wednesday said that the hotel has closed “for the next days” in order to “guarantee the safety of customers and employees.”

Juan Cristóbal del Monte, a doctor from France who is also staying at the hotel, told Spain’s Antena 3 broadcaste­r that there was an understand­ing among the guests that the measures were necessary even though there weren’t any more suspected cases.

“Our movements are curtailed, yes, but this is something for the common good,” he said.

Martelli said that boredom had settled in as the beach, with its palm trees and beer shacks, are out of reach.

Instead, they can see the yellow tents of a makeshift health clinic, installed in case anybody falls sick.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman looks out of a window at the H10 Costa Adeje Palace hotel in La Caleta, in the Canary Island of Tenerife, Spain. Spanish officials say a tourist hotel has been placed in quarantine after an Italian doctor staying there tested positive for the virus.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman looks out of a window at the H10 Costa Adeje Palace hotel in La Caleta, in the Canary Island of Tenerife, Spain. Spanish officials say a tourist hotel has been placed in quarantine after an Italian doctor staying there tested positive for the virus.

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