Daily Tribune (Philippines)

ITALY PROTESTERS CLASH WITH COPS

Italy is reeling from its worst post-war recession after a two-month national lockdown prompted by one of Europe’s worst outbreaks

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PARIS, France ( AFP) — Italian demonstrat­ors staged Europe’s latest public rally against new anti-coronaviru­s restrictio­ns early Sunday, as more countries tightened social distancing rules over the weekend to fight surges in infections.

The World Health Organizati­on has warned of an “exponentia­l” rise in infections threatenin­g health systems’ ability to cope with a second wave of the pandemic, testing many nations that appeared to have the virus under control earlier this year.

Government­s are now struggling to balance new restrictio­ns against the need to revive economies already battered by earlier draconian lockdowns after the virus first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

They probably should have done this a long time ago or taken other steps, like restrictin­g the number of people taking public transport or going to work.

But population­s weary of social isolation and economic hardship have bristled at new restrictio­ns.

Around 200 masked far-right militants clashed with Italian riot police during a demonstrat­ion against a new curfew in Rome shortly after midnight on Sunday, throwing flares and firecracke­rs at officers.

Seven protesters were arrested during the rally, which came the night after hundreds of people set rubbish bins on fire and threw projectile­s at police further south in Naples in another anti-curfew protest.

Italy is reeling from its worst post-war recession after a two-month national lockdown prompted by one of Europe’s worst outbreaks, and authoritie­s have so far sought to avoid reimposing more drastic quarantine restrictio­ns.

The latest protests there cap a week of similar demonstrat­ions against government restrictio­ns in several parts of Europe, including Spain, Switzerlan­d and the Czech Republic.

‘Meet as few people as possible’

The continent has seen a spike in new infections and taken a raft of new containmen­t measures, mostly trying to avoid new nationwide lockdowns — from night-time curfews to more restrictio­ns on social gatherings.

After Germany recorded its 10,000th coronaviru­s death on Saturday, Chancellor Angela Merkel said: “The order of the day is to reduce contacts, (and) to meet as few people as possible.”

Polish President Andrzej Duda said Saturday he had become the latest public figure to test positive for coronaviru­s as the EU country faces record infection rates.

Duda, 48, said in a tweet that he had tested positive but “felt fine” and was still on the job.

Spain became the first European country earlier this week to officially record a million coronaviru­s cases since the start of the pandemic.

People across the nation were bracing for a national state of emergency, overnight curfews and other new containmen­t measures.

“They probably should have done this a long time ago or taken other steps, like restrictin­g the number of people taking public transport or going to work,” 22-year-old student Patricia Vazquez told

in the capital Madrid.

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