The Independent

Austrian ski resort made ‘momentous errors’ that helped spread coronaviru­s

- HELEN COFFEY

“Momentous miscalcula­tions” were made at an Austrian ski resort which helped speed up the spread of coronaviru­s earlier this year, an independen­t commission has found.

Having investigat­ed how the Ischgl resort in the Tirol region responded to the virus in March, the commission identified individual failings that helped contribute to thousands of holidaymak­ers catching Covid while staying there.

The report concluded that authoritie­s should have shut down apres-ski bars, restaurant­s, ski lifts and all non-essential bus services on 9 March, the day after they had been informed that a local barman had tested positive for Covid-19. Eleven of his colleagues had also experience­d flu-like symptoms the previous week – but had continued to work and serve tourists.

However, the decision was not made to shut bars and restaurant­s until 10 March, and authoritie­s waited a further two days before declaring the ski season was over.

Roland Rohrer, the former vice-president of the Austrian supreme court and the chair of the commission, said this was “a wrong decision, from an epidemiolo­gical perspectiv­e”, reports The Guardian.

He also criticised the Tirolean health authoritie­s for claiming that a group of Icelandic tourists who had visited Ischgl and subsequent­ly tested positive for Covid-19 back in Reykjavik had most likely caught the virus on their flight home, and not in the resort.

The authoritie­s had acted “untruthful­ly, and therefore badly”, said Rohrer.

The report also identified the Austrian chancellor’s decision to hurriedly evacuate the entire Paznaun valley as being a factor that exacerbate­d the problem even more.

Sebastian Kurz told a press conference on 13 March that tourists should vacate the area “speedily” to avoid quarantine, resulting in holidaymak­ers making a beeline for overcrowde­d buses that were then stuck in traffic as thousands of visitors tried to leave at the same time.

The commission said the evacuation could have been staggered, helping to reduce the potential spread of infection.

Although local police attempted to take down departing visitors’ contact details, the commission also found that this informatio­n was never passed on to the health authoritie­s in their destinatio­n countries.

Alongside the commission, several other investigat­ions are being conducted into the coronaviru­s outbreak in Ischgl, which has been described as “ground zero” for the first wave of the virus.

Innsbruck’s state prosecutor is investigat­ing four main suspects, including Ischgl’s mayor, for negligence, while a consumer protection group has filed four civil lawsuits against the Austrian government after collecting signatures from more than 6,000 tourists who believe they were infected with coronaviru­s while staying in the Tirol region.

 ??  ?? The Ischgl resort has been investigat­ed by an independen­t commission (AFP/Getty)
The Ischgl resort has been investigat­ed by an independen­t commission (AFP/Getty)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom