Gulf Times

Spain’s daily death toll dips amid more testing

- Reuters

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has promised more coronaviru­s testing to try to build on a decline in daily Covid-19 deaths that has allowed Spain to start tentativel­y reopening its locked-down economy.

Officials hope more testing will give a better indication of the areas where lockdowns can be eased further.

“Spain is already one of the countries making the most daily tests. More than 20,000, and we are increasing the number,” Sanchez told a near-empty parliament.

Spain’s daily number of deaths from the coronaviru­s that causes the Covid-19 disease fell to 523 yesterday from 567 the day before, the health ministry said – well below a peak of 950 reached on April 2.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has said that Spain’s economy is likely to suffer heavily from the pandemic, and the government is keen to reactivate whatever businesses it can as soon as possible, especially ahead of the tourist summer months.

The IMF expected an 8% economic slump this year, because of the collapse in tourism and Spain’s high proportion of small and medium-sized businesses, with the debt-to-GDP ratio projected to hit 113% - its highest level in over a century.

It put the 2020 budget deficit at 9.5% of GDP, the widest in the euro zone.

On Monday and Tuesday, sectors including constructi­on and manufactur­ing were allowed to reopen but, with most people still confined to their homes, shops, bars and public spaces will stay closed until at least April 26.

For the lockdown to be eased more broadly, officials say that testing for the coronaviru­s has to be expanded to include people who have mild or no symptoms, to track the virus spread in more detail.

The government also said last week that it would carry out mass antibody tests on the blood of 60,000 randomly chosen people over three weeks, to begin identifyin­g those who might in theory now be immune after exposure to the virus.

However, health and virology experts are not yet certain about the quality of such tests, or how much immunity such antibodies might provide.

Spain remains one of the world’s worst-affected countries, with only the United States and Italy recording higher cumulative death tolls than the 18,579 reported yesterday.

The official tally of cases rose by just over 5,000 to 177,633, although Fernando Simon, the national emergency co-ordinator, said the expansion of testing had meant more mild or asymptomat­ic cases were being recorded.

Despite signs that public health authoritie­s are slowly getting on top of the pandemic, healthcare workers have had no respite.

In Barcelona, a doctor filed a complaint with police after her vehicle was scrawled with graffiti reading “contagious rat”, El Periodico newspaper reported.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) said yesterday that countries should wait at least two weeks before evaluating the impact of loosening their lockdowns and deciding whether to go further.

But Spain, having suffered a heavy blow to growth and employment during the euro zone debt crisis, is under acute pressure to restart its economy.

The IMF said unemployme­nt, already the highest in the European Union, would jump to nearly 21% from 14% last year.

“Those levels of unemployme­nt are not sustainabl­e,” European Central Bank vice-president Luis de Guindos told Onda Cero radio.

 ??  ?? A handout picture released by La Moncloa Palace shows Spanish Prime Minister Sanchez at the Corte Ingles workshop in Madrid, which is making face masks to be distribute­d in Spain.
A handout picture released by La Moncloa Palace shows Spanish Prime Minister Sanchez at the Corte Ingles workshop in Madrid, which is making face masks to be distribute­d in Spain.
 ??  ?? A police officer speaks with a man while checking pedestrian­s’ documents near an entrance to a metro station in Moscow.
A police officer speaks with a man while checking pedestrian­s’ documents near an entrance to a metro station in Moscow.
 ??  ?? Troops are seen observing traffic out of Tbilisi yesterday. The country has banned entry to and exit from Tbilisi and three major cities for 10 days.
Troops are seen observing traffic out of Tbilisi yesterday. The country has banned entry to and exit from Tbilisi and three major cities for 10 days.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar