Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• Germany’s Merkel warns of hard days ahead as Europe enacts new virus restrictio­ns,

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BERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel urged Germans to come together like they did in the spring to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s as the country posted another daily record of new cases Saturday.

“Difficult months are ahead of us,” she said in her weekly video podcast. “How winter will be, how our Christmas will be, that will all be decided in these coming days and weeks, and it will be decided by our behavior.”

Meanwhile, new restrictio­ns went into effect in several other European nations in an effort to staunch the resurgence of the pandemic.

In Paris and eight other French cities, restaurant­s, bars, movie theaters and other establishm­ents were being forced to close no later than 9 p.m. to try to reduce contact among people. The country was deploying 12,000 extra police officers to enforce the new rules.

Many restaurant owners have bristled at the order. An earlier monthslong lockdown devastated the sector.

“I have the right to question the government’s approach. I think it’s a catastroph­ic measure for the industry,” said Xavier Denamur, who owns Les Philosophe­s and several other bistros in Paris’ chic Le Marais district, saying if nothing else, the curfew should be 11 p.m.

“At least that would not destroy us,” he said. “There’s no evidence that this difference of a couple of hours will have any effect onthe virus circulatin­g.”

In Britain, a three-tier regional approach to battle the pandemic introduced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson went into effect, with each level bringing progressiv­ely tighter restrictio­ns.

On Saturday, tier-2 cities like London and York were subject to a ban on socializin­g with people from other households indoors, while the county of Lancashire joined Liverpool in tier 3 with the tightest restrictio­ns.

Among other things, that means pubs have been forced to close and socializin­g with others is banned even in many outdoor settings.

In Northern Ireland, a lockdown lasting four weeks came into force Friday. All pubs and restaurant­s must close except for takeaway services, and schools will close for two weeks for an extended half term holiday.

Data from Friday showed a further 136 people died in the U.K. within 28 days of testing positive for coronaviru­s, bringing the total official toll to 43,429.

The World Health Organizati­on has warned intensive care units in a number of European cities could reach maximum capacity in the coming weeks if the number of infections doesn’t slow.

Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenbe­rg joined the list of top politician­s who have tested positive for the virus and was quarantine­d though he showed no symptoms, his office told Austria’s APA newsagency.

The Vatican, meanwhile, said someone who lives in the same hotel as Pope Francis tested positive for the virus, adding to the 11 cases of COVID-19 among the Swiss Guards who protect him.

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the country’s head of state, was quarantine­d after a bodyguard was infected, his office said. A first test came out negative.

Germany, which was widely lauded for rapidly slowing the spread of the virus when the pandemic first broke out, has seen rapidly climbing numbers in recent days.

On Saturday, the country’s disease control center, the Robert Koch Institute, reported 7,830 cases overnight ,a new record.

Likemost countries, Germany has been grappling with how to keep schools and businesses open while trying to prevent people from coming into close contact with one another.

Germany has registered a total of 356,387 coronaviru­s cases and a relatively low9,767 deaths.

Ms. Merkel urged Germans to avoid unnecessar­y travel, cancel parties and remain at home whenever possible.

“What brought us so well through the first halfyear of the pandemic?” she asked. “It was that we stood together and obeyed the rules out of considerat­ion and common sense. This is the most effective remedy we currently have against the pandemic, and it is more necessary now than ever.”

In the neighborin­g Czech Republic, the number of new infections surpassed 10,000 for the first time, surging to 11,105 on Friday, the Health Ministry said. The country has now registered a total of 160,112 cases, including 1,283 deaths.

Despite new restrictiv­e measures to slow the surge, Health Minister Roman Prymula said he still expects a rise in those testing positive for about two weeks.

Next door, Slovakia said it was acquiring 13 million rapid antigen tests — enough to test each member of the population twice — and would establish 6,000 testing sites.

Prime Minister Igor Matovic said testing will take place over the next two weekends, starting with the three or four hardest-hit counties.It was not immediatel­y clear whether tests wouldbe mandatory.

Italy’s northern Lombardy region, where the European outbreak began in late February, has taken new measures to contain rebounding infections, limiting bar service and alcohol sales, banning contact sports and closing bingo parlors.

The regional government late Friday called for high schools to adopt hybrid schedules, with students alternatin­g in-person with online learning.

The measures were taken after Lombardy, Italy’s most populous region, again became the most affected, adding more than 2,000 infections a day. Hospitals are coming under strain, and intensive care units are filling up.

 ?? Daniel Cole/Associated Press ?? Friends gather at a bar before curfew Saturday in Marseille, southern France. France is deploying 12,000 police officers to enforce a new curfew that came into effect Friday night for the next month to slow the coronaviru­s spread.
Daniel Cole/Associated Press Friends gather at a bar before curfew Saturday in Marseille, southern France. France is deploying 12,000 police officers to enforce a new curfew that came into effect Friday night for the next month to slow the coronaviru­s spread.

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