San Diego Union-Tribune

ANGRY AND DIVIDED, AUSTRIANS ARGUE OVER NEW LOCKDOWN

- BY MELISSA EDDY Eddy writes for The New York Times.

Daniel Zeman wasn’t able to sell any of his handmade apple-ginger liqueur last year during the Christmas season because Austria, along with the rest of Europe, was in lockdown. He finally opened his stand four days ago, only to have the government announce that Sunday would be the last day. Austria was locking down starting today.

At a time when vaccinated people were looking forward to a return to traditiona­l holiday rituals, the decision was a blow that angered some and frustrated nearly everyone.

“If we have to close down in January, I understand that,” Zeman said. “But now it is Christmast­ime, and everyone wants to be together, to drink punch, buy gifts and do things with their families.”

Europe is experienci­ng a menacing fourth wave of the coronaviru­s, with soaring rates of infection. While Austria may be the first European country to respond with a nationwide lockdown, it may not be the last. That prospect, along with increasing­ly stringent vaccine mandates, is setting off a backlash here and elsewhere, with mass demonstrat­ions in Vienna, Brussels and the Dutch city of Rotterdam over the weekend, sometimes punctuated with violent outbreaks.

But European leaders may feel they have little choice, despite the spread of vaccines that were seen a year ago as a fail-proof way out of the pandemic. Austria, where 66 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, reported more than 14,000 new cases of the virus within 24 hours Sunday. Over the past week the Netherland­s has been averaging more than 20,000, while Germany has seen roughly double that number.

Austrian officials’ decision to impose a lockdown that will last at least 10 days and as many as 20 came after months of struggling attempts to halt the contagion through widespread testing and partial restrictio­ns. Starting Monday, public life in the country is to come to a halt, with people allowed to leave their homes only to go to work or to procure groceries or medicines.

The new COVID wave is being driven by widespread resistance to vaccines and the growing prevalence of vaccine and mask mandates. Austrian officials have said they will enforce a nationwide vaccine mandate in February, the first European nation to do so.

The opposition to the lockdown and vaccine mandates is being fueled in part by the far-right Freedom Party, which has used its platform in the Austrian Parliament to spread doubt about the effectiven­ess of the vaccines and to promote ivermectin, a drug typically used to treat parasitic worms that has repeatedly failed against the coronaviru­s in clinical trials.

But the fury is not limited to far-right activists, as the throngs that filled Vienna’s streets Saturday attested. Police estimated the crowd at 40,000, with many families and others far outnumberi­ng the right-wing extremists.

Most Austrian marchers refrained from the violence seen in the Netherland­s, where a protest against the government’s coronaviru­s measures descended into rioting in Rotterdam on Friday night, with attacks on police and cars and bicycles set on fire.

The anti-mandate fury had been building in Austria for a week, after the government imposed a lockdown on the roughly 2 million people who were not vaccinated. Police, given the task of enforcing the measure, said the unvaccinat­ed had become “clearly more radical,” Karl Nehammer, Austria’s interior minister, said Sunday.

A lead editorial for Austrian newspaper Salzburger Nachrichte­n took the government in Vienna to task for allowing the situation to become so politicize­d, with warring camps viewing one another as the enemy and the opponents of vaccines dismissing scientific research as politicall­y motivated.

“We have allowed that mistletoe-twig therapists are immensely popular and that alleged healers, layerson of hands and preachers of hate have become acceptable against the modern researcher­s and pharmacolo­gists,” wrote Manfred Perterer, the paper’s top editor.

He called for all relevant groups — not just politician­s, but scientists, cultural and social leaders — to engage in dialogue that would help ease some of the fears of those who are not vaccinated.

 ?? VADIM GHIRDA AP ?? People enjoy sitting in a cafe in Vienna on Sunday in advance of a nationwide lockdown that starts today to control the spread of the coronaviru­s.
VADIM GHIRDA AP People enjoy sitting in a cafe in Vienna on Sunday in advance of a nationwide lockdown that starts today to control the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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