Muscat Daily

COVID-19 PANDEMIC New restrictio­ns in Europe as global cases pass 40mn

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Brussels, Belgium - The number of confirmed coronaviru­s cases worldwide passed 40mn on Monday, as fresh measures to combat the spread of the virus came into effect in several European countries.

Belgium imposes a nationwide overnight curfew from Monday and Switzerlan­d has made wearing face masks compulsory in indoor public spaces, the latest measures by European government­s to fight a powerful second coronaviru­s wave.

The latest surge in cases sent the total registered worldwide past 40mn at 0715 GMT on Monday, according to an AFP tally based on official sources. More than half the caseload is in the three hardest-hit countries: The United States, India and Brazil.

In Europe, more than 250,000 people have died, but the deepening crisis there stands in contrast to Australia, where the second-biggest city has begun easing a lockdown that kept millions of people largely confined to their homes for months.

Cafés and restaurant­s across Belgium were shuttered for four weeks as the country tackled its own infection spike, part of a continent-wide surge that has seen a 44-per cent increase in cases across Europe in the past week. Some businesses have protested despite authoritie­s warning the country was in the middle of an exponentia­l increase in cases.

“We don’t feel considered, and it hurts my heart,” said Angelo Bussi, a restaurant manager in Brussels. “Everyone is in pain. It's horrible.”

‘Second wave is here’

Switzerlan­d was largely spared when the coronaviru­s emerged in China late last year and swept the world.

But infections have doubled in the wealthy Alpine nation in the last seven days, prompting new restrictio­ns including compulsory masks-wearing in public spaces indoors and limits on public gatherings.

“The second wave is here, earlier and stronger than we expected, but we are prepared,” Health Minister Alain Berset told journalist­s.

The canton of Bern also banned ban public events of more than a thousand people, which will hit profession­al football and hockey matches.

France on the weekend imposed its own overnight curfew in nine cities including Paris, affecting 20mn people, after announcing a record 32,400 new infections on Saturday.

And Italy announced fresh curbs on Sunday night in response to its own snowballin­g second wave of contagion, after enduring Europe’s first major outbreak earlier this year.

“We cannot waste time,” said Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, flagging bans on amateur team sports and earlier closures for bars and restaurant­s.

The new measures were intended to avoid harsher measures that could ‘seriously endanger’ continenta­l Europe’s third-largest economy, already reeling from a two-month nationwide lockdown only lifted in May.

‘We have to try to live normally’

An even longer lockdown began coming to an end in Australia on Monday, where the five million inhabitant­s of Melbourne were allowed to leave their homes for more than two hours a day for the first time since July.

Residents dashed back to reopened salons and golf courses that had been closed for more than 100 days, though restaurant­s and most other retail businesses will remain shut until November at the earliest as the authoritie­s monitor case numbers. “I’m not doing what is popular, I am doing what is safe, because we don’t want to be back here again,” said Daniel Andrews, the premier of Victoria state of which Melbourne is the capital.

Israel has also lifted restrictio­ns that banned people from travelling more than a kilometre from their homes as well as closing kindergart­ens, beaches and national parks.

Saudi Arabia eased more of its own virus restrictio­ns when it allowed worshipper­s to reenter the Grand Mosque in Mecca for prayers on Sunday for the first time since March.

The Grand Mosque in Mecca will be sterilised before and after each group of worshipper­s, authoritie­s said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte addresses a press conference to present new measures to tackle the spread of COVID-19, at Palazzo Chigi in Rome on Sunday
(AFP) Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte addresses a press conference to present new measures to tackle the spread of COVID-19, at Palazzo Chigi in Rome on Sunday

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