The Arizona Republic

Many nations split over easing virus lockdowns

- Jill Lawless, Angela Charlton and Elaine Kurtenbach

LONDON – Regional and political rifts are emerging in many countries over how fast to lift the lid on the coronaviru­s lockdowns, as worries about economic devastatio­n collide with fears of a second wave of deaths.

French mayors are resisting the government’s call to reopen schools, while Italian governors want Rome to ease lockdown measures faster. As the British government looks to reopen the economy, Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon has warned that acting too fast could let the virus wreak havoc again.

“Any significan­t easing up of restrictio­ns at this stage would be very, very risky indeed,” Sturgeon said Thursday.

The economic damage around the globe mounted.

In the U.S., nearly 3.2 million laid-off workers applied for unemployme­nt benefits last week, the government announced, bringing the running total over the past seven weeks to 33.5 million. When the nation’s April unemployme­nt rate data is released today, it is expected to be as high as 16%, a level not seen since the Depression.

Neiman Marcus, the 112-year-old luxury retailer, filed for Chapter11 bankruptcy, the first U.S. department store chain to be toppled by the outbreak.

And the Bank of England projected that Britain’s economy will shrink by 14% this year, its biggest decline since 1706, when Europe was locked in the War of the Spanish Succession.

In Britain, where the official death toll stands at more than 30,000, second only to the United States, Prime Minister Boris Johnson was expected to extend a more than six-week lockdown, but hopes to ease some restrictio­ns on economic and social activity starting next week.

Johnson said the government will act with “maximum caution” to prevent a second wave of infections.

In France, more than 300 mayors in the Paris region have urged President Emmanuel Macron to delay the reopening of schools, set for Monday. Many mayors around the country have already refused to reopen schools, and many parents will keep their children home even where they are functionin­g again.

The mayors called the timing “untenable and unrealisti­c,” saying they were put on a “forced march” to get schools ready without enough staff or equipment. They complained that the government guidelines were too vague and slow in coming.

But government­s are also under pressure to reopen faster and kick-start economies that have been plunged into hibernatio­n.

Italian regional governors are pressing to open shops and restaurant­s, just days after the country began easing its two-month lockdown by allowing 4.5 million people to return to work in offices and factories.

Governors want to be allowed to present their own plans for reopening, tailored to the rate of infection and economic needs of their regions.

After an outcry from the nation’s Roman Catholic bishops, Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte announced that public Masses will be allowed to resume May 18.

In Spain, support for the government is crumbling after seven weeks of a strict lockdown, with some regions and opposition parties demanding an end to the state of emergency declared on March 14. The government argues that it is far too soon.

Some of Germany’s 16 powerful state government­s are more impatient than others to open up businesses such as restaurant­s and hotels. At a meeting Wednesday with Chancellor Angela Merkel, it was agreed that state leaders would have wide leeway to decide when to open more sectors of the economy. They also will have to reimpose restrictio­ns locally if infections rebound.

In Russia, where the number of new infections is growing fast, President Vladimir Putin delegated the enforcemen­t of lockdowns and other restrictio­ns to regional government­s, leading to wide variations across the country.

Mikhail Vinogradov, head of the St. Petersburg Politics think tank, told the Vedomosti newspaper that the Moscow government is sending mixed messages that governors find hard to decipher — wanting a victory over the virus, while also encouragin­g easing of the lockdown.

Fractures are also evident in the U.S., where about half of the 50 states are easing their shutdowns, to the alarm of public health officials.

Many states have not put in place the robust testing and contact tracing that experts believe is necessary to detect and contain new outbreaks. And many governors have pressed ahead with reopening before their states met one of the key benchmarks in the Trump administra­tion’s guidelines for reopening — a 14-day downward trajectory in new infections.

“If we relax these measures without having the proper public health safeguards in place, we can expect many more cases and, unfortunat­ely, more deaths,” said Josh Michaud, associate director of global health policy with the Kaiser Family Foundation in Washington.

Researcher­s recently doubled their projection of deaths in the U.S. to about 134,000 through early August. So far, the U.S. has recorded about 75,000 deaths and 1.2 million confirmed infections.

Worldwide, the virus has infected more than 3.6 million people and killed over a quarter-million, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally, which experts agree understate­s the dimensions of the pandemic because of limited testing, difference­s in counting the dead and concealmen­t by some government­s.

China, where the virus emerged late last year, reported just two new cases on Thursday, both from overseas, and said the whole country now is at a low risk of further infections. The country has reported no new deaths from COVID-19 in more than three weeks.

Strict social distancing also appears to have vanquished the outbreak in New Zealand, where Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is mulling plans to relax the lockdown by allowing gatherings of up to 100 people and holding profession­al sports events without spectators.

But Ardern called for vigilance. “We think of ourselves as halfway down Everest,” she said. “I think it’s clear that no one wants to hike back up that peak.”

 ??  ?? A health care worker clasps her hands in prayer on Thursday outside St. Francis Hospital in Hartford, Conn., where Gov. Ned Lamont visited to thank the workers.
A health care worker clasps her hands in prayer on Thursday outside St. Francis Hospital in Hartford, Conn., where Gov. Ned Lamont visited to thank the workers.

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