Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Europe resumes restrictio­ns against COVID

Netherland­s ‘going into lockdown again’ in surge

- Danica Kirka and Mike Corder

LONDON – Nations across Europe moved to reimpose tougher measures to stem a new wave of COVID-19 infections spurred by the highly transmissi­ble omicron variant, with the Netherland­s leading the way by imposing a nationwide lockdown.

All non-essential stores, bars and restaurant­s in the Netherland­s will be closed until Jan. 14 starting Sunday, caretaker Prime Minister Mark Rutte said at a hastily arranged press conference Saturday night. Schools and universiti­es will shut until Jan. 9, he said.

In what is surely to prove a major disappoint­ment, the lockdown terms also rein in private holiday celebratio­ns. Residents only will be permitted two visitors except for Christmas and New Year’s, when four will be allowed, according to Rutte.

“The Netherland­s is going into lockdown again from tomorrow,” Rutte said, adding that the move was “unavoidabl­e because of the fifth wave caused by the omicron variant that is bearing down on us.”

Before the Dutch announceme­nt, alarmed ministers in France, Cyprus and Austria tightened travel restrictio­ns. Paris canceled its New Year’s Eve fireworks. Denmark closed theaters, concert halls, amusement parks and museums. Ireland imposed an 8 p.m. curfew on pubs and bars and limited attendance at indoor and outdoor events.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan underscore­d the official concern about the climbing cases and their potential to overwhelm the health care system by declaring a major incident Saturday, a move that allows local councils in Britain’s capital to coordinate work more closely with emergency services.

Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin captured the sense of the continent in an address to the nation, saying the new restrictio­ns were needed to protect lives and livelihood­s from the virus.

“None of this is easy,” Martin said Friday night. “We are all exhausted with COVID and the restrictio­ns it requires. The twists and turns, the disappoint­ments and the frustratio­ns take a heavy toll on everyone. But it is the reality that we are dealing with.”

In the Netherland­s, anticipati­on a government meeting Saturday would result in tougher restrictio­ns caused shoppers to swarm commercial areas of Dutch cities, fearing it would be their last chance to buy Christmas gifts.

Rotterdam municipali­ty tweeted it was “too busy in the center” of the port city and told people: “Don’t come to the city.” Amsterdam also warned the main shopping street was busy and urged people to stick to coronaviru­s rules.

In the U.K., where confirmed daily cases soared to record numbers this week, the government has reimposed a requiremen­t for masks to be worn indoors and ordered people to show proof of vaccinatio­n or a recent negative coronaviru­s test when going to nightclubs and large events.

But the moves are causing anger. Critics of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s latest coronaviru­s restrictio­ns flooded Oxford Street, a popular London shopping area, on Saturday. The maskless protesters blew whistles, yelled “Freedom!” and told passersby to remove their face coverings.

Hundreds of people blocked traffic as they marched with signs bearing slogans such as “Vaccine passports kill our freedoms” and “Don’t comply.” Other signs had the faces of Johnson or U.K. Health Secretary Sajid Javid and read, “Give them the boot.”

Scientists are warning the British government needs to go further to prevent hospitals from being overwhelme­d.

Leaked minutes from the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s suggested a ban on indoor mixing and hospitalit­y, the BBC reported.

Britain and other nations are also accelerati­ng the pace of booster shots after early data showed two doses of vaccine were less effective against omicron. Shopping centers, cathedrals and soccer stadiums in Britain have been converted into mass vaccinatio­n centers.

During a visit to a mass vaccinatio­n pop-up clinic at London soccer team Chelsea’s stadium on Saturday, Khan said the running of public services could be impeded by the rapidly spreading variant.

“The big issue we have is the number of Londoners who have this virus and that’s leading to big issues in relation to staff absences and the ability of our public services to run at the optimum levels,” he told the BBC. “I’m incredibly worried about staff absences in the (National Health Service), in the fire brigade, in the police service, in our councils across London.”

Omicron is now the dominant coronaviru­s variant in London and efforts were stepped up to reach people who haven’t yet been vaccinated or boosted.

“I want to make a direct appeal to the more than 1 million Londoners who are yet to come forward for any COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns – it’s never too late to get your first or second dose,” the mayor said. “It will help to protect you, your loved ones and our NHS.”

In France, the government announced that it will start giving the vaccine to children in the 5-11 age group beginning Wednesday. Prime Minister Jean Castex said Friday that with the omicron variant spreading like “lightning,” the government proposed requiring proof of vaccinatio­n for those entering restaurant­s, cafes and other public establishm­ents. The pending measure requires parliament­ary approval.

Demonstrat­ions were planned in Paris to oppose the vaccine pass proposal and ongoing restrictio­ns.

Thousands of opponents of vaccine requiremen­ts and mask mandates protested Saturday in Hamburg, Berlin, Düsseldorf and other German cities. In Austria, local media reported the crowds swelled to tens of thousands.

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