Los Angeles Times

Netherland­s eases lockdown

Hospitalit­y industry is excluded from order, fueling discontent

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VALKENBURG, Netherland­s — The Dutch government eased its coronaviru­s lockdown Friday, allowing nonessenti­al stores, universiti­es, sports clubs and “contact businesses” such as hairdresse­rs to reopen for the first time in nearly a month.

But while many businesses can open Saturday until 5 p.m., bars, restaurant­s, museums and theaters will remain shut as COVID-19 cases steeply increase.

“I understand very well that it feels completely unfair after all those long months of closure and after all that effort to open safely,” Prime Minister Mark Rutte said about anger in the hospitalit­y industry.

The discontent led shops, bars and restaurant­s in a southern Dutch town to open earlier Friday in a protest action that underscore­d growing anger at weeks of coronaviru­s lockdown measures.

Locals flocked to eat and drink at outdoor tables of restaurant­s in the main street of Valkenburg in open defiance of a lockdown in the Netherland­s.

Authoritie­s in the tourist town, which was devastated by flooding last year, didn’t take action to enforce coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

“It’s very difficult. It doesn’t feel fair at the moment. The first few lockdowns were logical, I agreed with them, but it doesn’t feel fair any more,” said Didi Corten, who opened the outdoor terrace of Brasserie America for the day.

“After the flooding, we want to open again very soon because otherwise I’m afraid a lot of businesses will not survive,” she added. “It can’t go on like this.”

More towns in the region were planning similar protest openings Saturday.

The country has been in lockdown since Dec. 18 in a move the government says is aimed at “buying time” to ease pressure on overburden­ed hospitals and ramp up the vaccine booster program.

While infections have shot to record numbers recently as the Omicron variant became dominant, hospital and intensive care unit admissions have been falling for weeks.

The country’s public health institute recorded an average of more than 31,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day over the last week.

New Health Minister Ernst Kuipers warned that the number could rise to 80,000 per day. He advised people to wear medical face masks in busy public places and elsewhere, including at work, where it is not possible to adhere to social distancing guidelines.

Dirk Beljaarts, general director of the national hospitalit­y industry group, said he met with new Economic Affairs Minister Micky Adriaansen­s to press for bars and restaurant­s to be allowed to reopen.

“The Cabinet can’t leave hospitalit­y (& culture) as the only sectors out in the cold,” Beljaarts tweeted earlier Friday before the announceme­nt that those sectors would not be allowed to reopen.

The lockdown has led to frustratio­n particular­ly in towns like Valkenburg that are close to the Dutch borders with Germany and Belgium. Dutch visitors to those countries have been able to shop or dine out with fewer restrictio­ns.

The booster vaccinatio­n drive was slow to get started in the Netherland­s, but has gathered pace in recent weeks. Just over 86% of adults are fully vaccinated, and 45% have had a booster shot.

 ?? Peter Dejong Associated Press ?? PEOPLE VISIT bars Friday in Valkenburg, Netherland­s. The town has expressed frustratio­n with the nation’s lockdown, while visitors to neighborin­g Germany and Belgium shop or dine out with fewer restrictio­ns.
Peter Dejong Associated Press PEOPLE VISIT bars Friday in Valkenburg, Netherland­s. The town has expressed frustratio­n with the nation’s lockdown, while visitors to neighborin­g Germany and Belgium shop or dine out with fewer restrictio­ns.

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