Kuwait Times

Pope goes livestream to fight viral epidemic

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VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis decided to deliver Sunday’s prayer by livestream and Italy called in retired doctors as the new coronaviru­s epidemic gathered strength and emptied streets in Europe’s worst affected country. The 83-year-old pontiff broke with centuries of tradition by enlisting the help of technology to keep crowds from descending on Saint Peter’s Square for the traditiona­l Angelus Prayer.

“The prayer will be broadcast via livestream by Vatican News and on screens in Saint Peter’s Square,” the Vatican said in a statement. It had originally promised to review the Argentine-born pope’s schedule “to avoid the disseminat­ion” of the new COVID-19 disease. The Vatican appears to believe that the pope’s absence from his traditiona­l spot at the window will keep the crowds on the vast square down and the threat of contagion low. The pope himself has been out of action for more than a week with a cold.

The Vatican is in the process of unrolling unpreceden­ted health precaution­s designed to keep the city state’s 450 mostly elderly residents safe. It recorded its first COVID-19 infection on Thursday and was awaiting the results of a test on another person who appeared at a Vatican-organized event last month. That conference was also attended by Microsoft President Brad Smith and European Parliament President David Sassoli. The Vatican said all those present were being notified about the test as a precaution.

Coalition leader gets virus

The Italian government finds itself at the forefront of the global fight against an epidemic that has convulsed the markets and paralyzed global supply chains since first emerging in China late last year. Ministers decided at an all-night emergency meeting to call in retired doctors as part of an effort to bolster the strained healthcare system with 20,000 additional staff.

Italy’s death toll ballooned by a single-day record of 49 on Friday and now stands at 197 - the most outside China itself. The head of the Italian ruling coalition’s junior partner became the latest high-profile figure to confirm coming down with the new disease. “I am fine,” the Democratic Party’s Nicola Zingaretti said on Facebook. “I will have to stay home for the next few days.”

The accelerati­ng spread of the illness emptied Italian train stations and turned usually thronged parts of Rome into a ghost town. Many of the city’s outdoor restaurant­s and cafes were either closed on Friday night or had free tables overseen by forlorn staff with little to do but chat. The expansive street that runs from Rome’s Colosseum along the Forum was deserted and the magnificen­t ruins stood in their natural splendor - and without being swarmed by tourists - on a sunny Saturday afternoon.

‘Focus on containmen­t’

The sharp drop in visitor numbers is wreaking havoc with the Italian tourism industry and contributi­ng to fears that the anemic economy is about to tip back into recession. But the government’s most immediate concern is the threat of infections that had been largely contained to pockets of the richer north spreading to the poorer and the south where medical services are weaker.

The World Health Organizati­on urged the Italian government on Friday to keep “a strong focus on containmen­t measures”. The government said its medical recruitmen­t drive should increase the number of intensive care beds from 5,000 to 7,500 in the coming days. The number of Italians receiving intensive care treatment for COVID-19 reached 462 on Friday. The total number of coronaviru­s infections grew to 4,636. —AFP

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