Los Angeles Times

Europe steps up rules as virus cases soar

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BERLIN — Fears rose Thursday that Europe is running out of chances to control its fall coronaviru­s outbreak, as infections hit record daily highs in Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy and Poland.

France has slapped a 9 p. m. curfew on many of its biggest cities, including Paris. Britain on Thursday announced new limits on gatherings in London and has imposed more stringent measures in the north of England. Italy has issued a nationwide mask- wearing mandate. The Netherland­s has ordered bars and restaurant­s to shut for several weeks.

The head of the World Health Organizati­on’s Europe office urged government­s to be “uncompromi­sing ” in their efforts to control the spread of the virus.

“These measures are meant to keep us all ahead of the curve and to f latten its course,” the WHO’s Dr. Hans Kluge said. “It is therefore up to us to accept them while they are still relatively easy to follow instead of following the path of severity.”

Kluge cited epidemiolo­gical models suggesting that if 95% of people wear masks and practice other social-distancing measures, Europe could avoid about 281,000 deaths by February. But relaxing restrictio­ns instead could lead to a fivefold increase in deaths by January, he warned.

European nations have collective­ly seen nearly 230,000 confirmed deaths from COVID- 19 — more than the 217,000- plus deaths reported so far in the United States, according to f igures tallied by Johns Hopkins University.

Although Germany, Europe’s most populous nation, is still in comparativ­ely good shape, alarm bells are ringing there, too. On Thursday, the national disease control center reported 6,638 new cases over 24 hours — exceeding the previous record of nearly 6,300 set in late March, although testing has expanded greatly since then.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and Germany’s 16 state governors agreed Wednesday night to tighten mask- wearing rules, make bars close early and limit the number of people who can gather in areas where coronaviru­s infection rates are high. But those measures “probably won’t be enough,” Merkel’s chief of staff, Helge Braun, told ARD television.

“We must stop this exponentia­l rise — the quicker the better,” Merkel said, noting that neighborin­g European countries are having to take “very drastic measures.”

The Czech Republic has shut down its schools. The Health Ministry there conf irmed 9,544 new coronaviru­s cases Wednesday, exceeding the days- old previous record by more than 900. The government announced Thursday that the military would set up a coronaviru­s hospital at Prague’s exhibition center.

“We have to build extra capacity as soon as possible,” Prime Minister Andrej Babis said. “We have no time. The prognosis is not good.”

In France, President Emmanuel Macron put 18 million residents in nine regions, including Paris, under a 9 p. m. curfew starting Saturday for at least four weeks, and possibly through Dec. 1.

Aurelien Rousseau, director of the Paris region’s public health agency, said nearly half of the region’s intensive care beds were now occupied by coronaviru­s patients, with other hospital beds filling rapidly too.

“It’s a kind of spring tide that affects everybody simultaneo­usly,” Rousseau said. “We had a blind spot in our tracking policies. It was the private sphere, festive events.”

The British government Thursday moved London and half a dozen other areas into the country’s secondhigh­est virus risk level, meaning that millions of residents will be barred from indoor meetings with people other than those from their own households and will be asked to minimize travel.

“I know that these restrictio­ns are difficult for people. I hate the fact that we have to bring them in,” British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said. “But it is essential that we do bring them in both to keep people safe and to prevent greater economic damage in the future.”

The WHO’s Kluge said that most of the spread is happening in homes, indoor spaces and communitie­s not complying with protection measures.

“The evolving epidemic in Europe raises great concern,” he said. “But we should not hold back with relatively smaller actions in order to avoid the same very painful damaging actions we saw in the first peak.”

Italy, hard hit in the f irst wave but so far spared the worst of the second, recorded its biggest single- day jump in infections Wednesday since the start of the pandemic. It added 7,332 more cases amid a resurgence that is straining the country’s contact- tracing system.

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