The Guardian (USA)

Reporting on Covid-19 in Spain: 'The limits of our new normality are being tested'

- Sam Jones in Madrid

A chunk of the night of 31 January this year was spent on a fact-finding mission to the James Joyce Irish pub in Madrid, where, over the noise of a loud covers band and the bellowing of customers, I shouted for people’s thoughts on the UK’s departure from the EU as the clock struck a muffled midnight.

The following day, after filing my Brexit dispatch to the Observer, I rang a Spanish pilot to ask about one of the stranger missions of his career. Francisco Javier Martínez, an amiable aviator with more than 40 years’ experience, was just back from flying his 747 to China to evacuate 120 people – most of them British and Spanish – from Wuhan.

Those were the early days: the coronaviru­s outbreak had yet to become a pandemic and the virus was still vying with Brexit to become the story of 2020.

Martínez was modest and matterof-fact about the trip but, when I look back over his quotes seven months on, his descriptio­n of flying to China reads rather differentl­y.

“Wuhan looked like a desert; there wasn’t a car on the motorway and the airport was totally empty,” he said. “It was as if a bomb had gone off and left the city totally empty. No people, no cars, no movement, nothing. It was all a bit overwhelmi­ng.”

Six weeks later, his words could equally have described Spain as it folded itself quickly and compliantl­y into one of Europe’s strictest lockdowns.

The change was instant. Bars and cafes pulled down their shutters, the traffic disappeare­d and the shrieks and laughter of children in my Madrid neighbourh­ood gave way to birdsong at an uncommonly loud pitch – and then, after dark, to the 8pm applause for healthcare workers.

Overnight, the world had shrunk. Life became a collision of work and homeschool­ing, my wife and I rushing up and down the stairs to make sure our sons were keeping up with their lessons.

Outside, weeds sprouted from once well-tended streets, the exhibition centre up the road became a field hospital, and the local ice rink was transforme­d into a makeshift morgue as the capital struggled to maintain the dignity of its coronaviru­s dead.

Confined to my office at home, wondering if my number would come up in the government’s video press conference lottery, I embarked on relentless rounds of phone-bashing and Zoom calls.

There were doctors, nurses, and undertaker­s; there were care home workers and NGO staff; there were academics and scientists; there were farmers and sex workers; and there were politician­s.

Some voices still manage to creep free of the tangle of interviews, their eloquence and clarity all the more remarkable given the circumstan­ces.

The most persistent remains that of the care home worker who told me how much she missed being able to hug her children and those she looked after at work.

“The other day, one of the grannies, who hadn’t seen her daughter for a fortnight, wanted to give me a hug and a kiss,” she said. “But I couldn’t because we’re not allowed. She said: ‘Well at least give me your hand then, sweetheart, because you’re all we’ve got.’”

Occasional­ly, an interviewe­e’s worries extended beyond Spain. A few hours before the prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, ordered the country into lockdown on 14 March, a nurse from one of the hardest-hit northern regions of Spain got in touch with me through a friend. She was looking on at the British government’s response to the crisis with utter horror.

“I think it’s really important that the UK looks at what is happening in Spain and Italy AND DOES NOT ALLOW things to get even worse there,” she said in a WhatsApp message. “The decisions your government is taking seem terrible to me, and as a nurse I need to try to save as many lives as I can.”

Spain’s lockdown paid off, slashing transmissi­on rates and easing the strain on overstretc­hed intensive care units.

But, as predicted, the number of cases is on the rise once more as the sacrifices of the confinamie­nto fade, bars and beaches beckon, and the limits of what the government calls “the new normality” are tested.

In the past two weeks, the health ministry has reported 33,965 new cases of Covid-19, 1,772 of them diagnosed in the 24 hours between Tuesday and Wednesday alone. To date, Spain has logged more than 305,000 cases and recorded more than 28,000 deaths.

We may or may not already be swept up in a second wave here – it depends on the day and on who you ask.

Whatever happens in the coming months, though – whether the schools reopen in September as planned; whether the economy will be back on track by 2023, as Sánchez hopes – the crisis has already yielded some lessons.

Many of the unhealed socioecono­mic wounds of the 2008 financial crisis have begun to seep once again. Here, as elsewhere, the poorest have been hit disproport­ionately hard by the virus and its attendant effects, while the health and care systems in regions such as Madrid are crying out for proper management and investment.

But, as a glance at the number of people wearing face masks on the street will tell you, Spaniards have also shown a remarkable degree of forbearanc­e and a willingnes­s to put their lives on hold for the common good.

If only the same could be said for all of the country’s elected representa­tives. While some have called for unity and cooperatio­n in the face of a common and global enemy, others are only too happy to exploit the pandemic and carry on puffing out clouds of rhetoric that are as mephitic as they are empty.

My life as a reporter is slowly drifting back towards something approachin­g its former normality. On Tuesday I drove out of Madrid for the first time in months to report on a story which, also for the first time in months, had nothing to do with Covid-19. And apart from the mask, the hand gel and the distancing, it didn’t feel all that different.

Some things, however, have changed forever. I would like to have been able to return to the UK to see my dad before he died in April, and to have been able to stand a couple of metres from my mum, brother and sister as they buried him on a rainy Friday morning.

As the months roll on and we are pitched from peak to trough, I sometimes wonder whether the foresight could ever have matched the hindsight. And I remember something else that Martínez told me about flying into Wuhan.

A thought had occurred to him as he approached the city, and his nine words still provide as fine a précis of the Covid crisis as you’ll get from anyone. “This was all a bit bigger than we’d thought.”

 ??  ?? A couple of tourists wearing face masks walk along the La Malagueta beach in Málaga in July. New outbreaks led to new restrictio­ns to curb the spread of Covid-19. Photograph: Jesús Mérida/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
A couple of tourists wearing face masks walk along the La Malagueta beach in Málaga in July. New outbreaks led to new restrictio­ns to curb the spread of Covid-19. Photograph: Jesús Mérida/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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