Malta Independent

Italy tries to contain virus as neighbours fear its spread

- PAOLO SANTALUCIA and NICOLE WINFIELD

Police manned checkpoint­s around quarantine­d towns in Italy’s north on Monday as authoritie­s sought to contain cases of COVID-19 virus that have made Italy the focal point of the outbreak in Europe and fears of its cross-border spread.

At least 190 people in Italy’s north have tested positive for the virus and four people have died, including an 84-year-old man who died overnight in Bergamo, the Lombardy regional government reported.

But officials still haven’t pinpointed the origin of the contagion, which by Monday had spread to more than a half-dozen regions and prompted Austria to temporaril­y halt rail traffic across its border with Italy.

“These rapid developmen­ts over the weekend have shown how quickly this situation can change,” EU Health Commission­er Stella Kyriakides said in Brussels. “We need to take this situation of course very seriously, but we must not give in to panic, and, even more importantl­y, to disinforma­tion.”

Italy’s neighbours Slovenia and Croatia, which are popular destinatio­ns for Italian tourists and whose own citizens often travel to Italy, were holding crisis meetings Monday, although neither reported any cases. Croatia announced it would monitor any travelers coming from Italy, including Croatian children returning from school trips.

Romanian Prime Minister Ludovic Orban said anyone entering Romania from any region where the virus had been reported would be quarantine­d for 14 days, but local media reported that arriving passengers were only being asked to fill out a form.

While Italian authoritie­s cancelled soccer matches and closed schools, theater performanc­es and even Venice’s famed Carnival, they also sought to calm fears by noting the virus’ low mortality rate compared to the seasonal flu. The four people who died were all elderly and two of them had other serious ailments.

Speaking on state-run RAI news, virologist Ilaria Capua of the University of Florida noted that Italy’s high number of cases were due to the fact that Italy was “actively seeking them out.” More than 3,000 people have been tested for the virus, most of whom had direct contact with those infected.

“It is likely that the more we look, the more we will find,” Capua said. But she stressed that the majority of cases likely wouldn’t even require a doctor’s visit and that Italy’s numbers are

“very analogous to what we will see in many other European countries.”

Italy, however, wasn’t taking chances and effectivel­y sealed off a dozen northern Italian towns where more than 100 of the cases were found. On Monday, police wearing face masks manned checkpoint­s along the road into Codogno, southeast of Milan, where the first patient to test positive for the virus was hospitaliz­ed last week.

Residents wearing face masks and gloves lined up at Codogno’s supermarke­t to stock up on food, only to find out the market was still closed on orders of the mayor.

The fears spread to Lombardy’s capital, Milan, Italy’s financial hub, where the final two runway shows of Milan Fashion Week scheduled for Monday were canceled. While most fashion houses held shows as usual Sunday, Giorgio Armani and Laura Biagiotti presented their collection­s behind closed doors, streaming live for the fashion public.

On Monday, the Lombardy region reported the death of the fourth victim and that it had registered 38 more cases beyond the 152 reported nationwide late Sunday, bringing Italy’s total to at least 190.

Italy’s vice minister for health, Pier Paolo Silveri, said the country was appealing to Italians’ “civic sense” to abide by the containmen­t measures for the two weeks that the northern quarantine has been imposed.

The mounting cases surprised Premier Giuseppe Conte, given Italy had imposed more stringent measures than any other European country after the first cases were reported in China. Italy on Jan. 31 barred flights to and from China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau, began screening all arriving passengers at its airports and declared a state of emergency to free up funding for containmen­t measures.

Until last week, Italy only had registered three people who tested positive for the virus, two of whom were a Chinese couple visiting from Wuhan. They have been recovering at Rome’s infectious disease hospital.

The EU’s health security committee was meeting Monday to take stock of developmen­ts, notably in Italy. A joint team from the World Health Organizati­on and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control were also set to visit Italy.

“It is an incredible time. Less than two months ago, the coronaviru­s was completely unknown to us. The past few weeks has demonstrat­ed just how quickly a new virus cans spread around the world and cause widespread fear and disruption,” WHO boss Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a news conference in Stockholm via a video link.

He said the WHO was especially concerned about the cases in Italy, South Korea and

Iran, where the death toll hit 50 in the city of Qom on Monday.

Amid some scaremonge­ring and false reports linking migrants to the disease, notably in Italy, EU Crisis Management Commission­er Janez Lenarcic said “it would be highly regrettabl­e if this situation would be politicize­d.”

When countries take action, he said, the “measures should be first based on credible risk assessment and scientific evidence. Second, measures should be proportion­ate, and third, they should be taken in coordinati­on with others. We should act as a union here, not individual­ly.”

Lenarcic said that the rules governing Europe’s Schengen passport free travel area allow for border closures in cases of public security concerns, but he said that only member nations can decide whether to reintroduc­e border controls.

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