San Diego Union-Tribune

ITALY BATTLING EUROPE’S FIRST MAJOR OUTBREAK

Officials lock down at least 10 towns near Milan, cancel end of Venice Carnival due to coronaviru­s worries

- BY JASON HOROWITZ & ELISABETTA POVOLEDO

Europe confronted its first major outbreak of the coronaviru­s as an eruption of more than 150 cases in Italy prompted officials Sunday to lock down at least 10 towns, close schools in major cities and cancel sporting events and cultural touchstone­s, including the end of the Venice Carnival.

The worrisome spike — from fewer than five known cases in Italy before Thursday — shattered the sense of safety and distance that much of the continent had felt in recent months even as the virus has infected more than 78,000 worldwide and killed about 2,600, nearly all in China.

The perception of a rising threat was amplified on TV channels, newspaper headlines and social media feeds across Europe, where leaders could face their

greatest challenge since the 2015 migration crisis.

That surge of people into Europe radically altered the politics of the European Union and exposed its institutio­nal weaknesses. This time, it is an invisible virus from abroad that has slipped past Europe’s borders and presents its bickering coalitions with a potential emergency.

If the virus spreads, the fundamenta­l principle of open borders within much of Europe — so central to the identity of the bloc — will undergo a stress test, as will the vaunted but strained European public health systems, espe

cially in countries that have undergone austerity measures.

Already, a new nervousnes­s has pervaded Europe.

In Italy’s Lombardy region, 10 towns were locked down after a cluster of cases emerged in Codogno, southeast of Milan.

Residents were supposed to leave or enter the towns only with special permission, affecting at least 50,000 people, and by Sunday night, police officers in surgical masks were waving down cars.

Austrian officials stopped a train en route from Italy to Austria and Germany to test passengers for the virus. The Austrian interior minister, Karl Nehammer, said the tests came back negative so the train got the “all clear.”

In France, the new health minister, Olivier Veran, stressed the country’s preparedne­ss, saying it would significan­tly ramp up its testing.

“There is a problemati­c situation at the door, in Italy, that we are watching with great attention,” he said Sunday, adding that a Europe-wide discussion between health ministers was in the works.

On Sunday night, an aid ship bringing hundreds of migrants, who had been rescued off the coast of Libya, to a Sicilian port received instructio­ns from the Italian government to remain in quarantine for 14 days as a precaution, according to the ship’s Twitter account.

Fears of foreigners spreading the virus across oceans has already prompted some government­s around the world to impose new border or travel controls.

The Trump administra­tion has barred entry to the

United States by most foreign nationals who have recently visited China, where the virus first appeared and spread. Much of the world has adopted similar controls, but the virus has continued to spread, most notably to South Korea, where more cases have been recorded than anywhere else outside China, and this past week to Iran, where eight deaths have been reported.

Israel today will block entry to all nonresiden­ts who have visited Japan and South Korea in the 14 days before their arrival. On Sunday, President Moon Jae-in of South Korea, which has 763 confirmed infections and six deaths, put the country on the highest possible alert, empowering the government to ban visitors from

China and take other sweeping measures to contain the outbreak.

Even China — with an authoritar­ian government that has locked down areas with tens of millions of people in an attempt to stamp out the epidemic — has struggled to contain the virus, which has no known cure.

But the scores of new cases in Italy, mostly in the Lombardy region that includes densely populated Milan, present a new challenge for a country with a wobbly government often paralyzed by infighting.

That government has now become the reluctant laboratory to test whether the virus can be successful­ly contained in an open European society with a liberal approach to restrictio­ns.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte of Italy said on Italian television Sunday that the country had taken precaution­s, including barring flights from China in January. These measures seemed to have paid off “even if now it looks like it didn’t,” he said.

He suggested that the surge of Italian cases only reflected Italy’s casting a wider net in terms of testing.

“We cannot exclude that after tests that are equally rigorous, the numbers can go up in other countries,” Conte said.

Beatrice Lorenzin, a former Italian health minister, said the sharp rise in cases in Italy resulted from systematic checks that discovered a “second generation of contagion.”

She said this was probably caused by infected people who traveled to Italy from China using indirect flights without declaring their original departure point or putting themselves in voluntary quarantine during the virus’ incubation period.

“I hope similar things did not happen in other countries,” she said.

The outbreak in Codogno, in Lombardy, was detected after a 38-year-old man was admitted to the city’s hospital and diagnosed with the virus Thursday. But the man had developed symptoms perhaps five days before that, potentiall­y allowing the virus to spread.

Health officials are trying to figure out how he contracted the virus; he had not been to China. Many cases in Lombardy, officials say, may

be traceable to that one case.

At least five members of the hospital medical staff and several patients have been infected. Other persons who tested positive include the man’s pregnant wife, some friends, and others who spent time with them. The towns surroundin­g the ones where the man works and lives have been included in the shutdown.

What had seemed like a contained few cases spread throughout the country’s wealthy north. So did the precaution­s.

People wore surgical masks in Aosta, which is on the Swiss border. Officials in the Piedmont region closed schools in Turin, and Venice cut its Carnival short. The patriarch of Venice, the Rev. Francesco Moraglia, suspended all religious ceremonies, including Ash Wednesday celebratio­ns that mark the beginning of Lent.

At least two trade fairs in Milan, cornerston­es of the city’s economy, were postponed. But the women’s fashion shows, except for those by Armani, continued on schedule Sunday to large crowds, with few wearing masks, The Associated Press reported. The Giorgio Armani fashion house made a last-minute decision to stream its shows from empty theaters.

Two elderly people who tested positive for the coronaviru­s were in intensive care at Venice’s municipal hospital. Three people in Italy have died of the virus.

In the regional capital of Milan, officials closed museums, schools, its cathedral, and halted religious and cultural events. Many other venues, aside from those providing essential services, have been closed, including most bars and nightclubs.

 ?? LUIGI COSTANTINI AP ?? A police officer wearing a sanitary mask directs a Carnival participan­t in Venice on Sunday. The event is shutting down early.
LUIGI COSTANTINI AP A police officer wearing a sanitary mask directs a Carnival participan­t in Venice on Sunday. The event is shutting down early.
 ?? ANDREAS SOLARO AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Women wearing respirator­y masks walk across Piazza del Duomo near Milan Cathedral on Sunday. Ten towns in Italy’s Lombardy region are on lockdown after coronaviru­s cases emerged in Codogno, southeast of Milan.
ANDREAS SOLARO AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Women wearing respirator­y masks walk across Piazza del Duomo near Milan Cathedral on Sunday. Ten towns in Italy’s Lombardy region are on lockdown after coronaviru­s cases emerged in Codogno, southeast of Milan.

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