The Oklahoman

Europe reopens borders amid global recession

- By Angela Charlton, Colleen Barry and Pablo Gorondi

PARIS — The world faces the worst global rec essi on inn early a century, a key economic body warned Wednesday, while in Europe, restrictio­ns to fight the spread of coronaviru­s portend a bleak summer tourism season even as more nations announced plans to welcome visitors again.

Beginning June 16, Austria will open up to all European neighbors with the exception of Spain, Portugal, Sweden and Britain, meaning that visitors from 31 countries will no longer be required to undergo a two-week quarantine upon arrival. Greece, another European holiday hot spot, will allow tourists to fly to Athens or the main northern city of Thessaloni­ki beginning on June 15.

But t hat's hoping people have money to spend.

The Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t said Wednesday that global economic output could fall by as much as 7.6% this year if a second wave of infections emerges, with the pan de mic' s economic impact expected to be even harsher in Europe because of the continent's strict and relatively lengthy coronaviru­s lockdowns.

In the eur ozone, which includes the 19 European

Union nations that use the common euro currency, GDP is expected to plunge 11.5% this year in case of a second wave and by over 9% even if another round of infections is avoided.

“Now we' re in the midst of ... perhaps the most global health, economic and social crisis and it's simply the most severe any of us have ever witnessed,” OECD Secretary General Angel Gurri as aid during t he presentati­on of the report in Paris. He named tourism and air travel among the “critical” sectors hard hit by the pandemic and urged countries to cooperate in developing and fairly distributi­ng a vaccine for the virus.

“As long as a virus is widespread somewhere, the threat will remain everywhere and economic costs will persist as some borders remain closed,” Gurria said, with the report predicting that the crisis would leave“long-lasting scars,” including lower living standards, high unemployme­nt and weak investment.

The virus has infected 7.2 million people worldwide and killed nearly 412,000, about 180,000 of them in Europe, according to official figures tallied by Johns Hopkins University. The true toll is believed to be much higher because many people di ed without being tested.

Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenbe­rg said the border with Italy to the south would be open without conditions on June 16 but that a travel warning for Austrian citizens was still in place for Italy' s northern region of Lombardy. That region, the epicenter of Italy's epidemic, has still been showing tripledigi­t growth in daily infections while much of the rest of the country counts a handful or fewer.

While Italy opened its own borders on June 3, Austria's reluctance to open their shared border has been a sore spot between the two.

Austrian Health Minister Rudolf Anschober said restrictio­ns would remain in place for Spain because its own borders remain closed until July 1 for most tourists and for Portugal due to an increase in infections in recent days.

“Please pack your bags, but don't forget the situation at home,” Anschober said, emphasizin­g that the virus remains in circulatio­n. “Please consider every trip, whether with the family and on business, and when possible don't travel.”

Italy's Coldiretti farm lobby said the Austrian border opening was critical to Italian tourism, which normally registers summer holiday visits by 3.4 million Austrians and 7 million Germans who cross Austria to reach Italy. Coldiretti cal l ed Austria's move “an important signal.” Foreign visitors spent 167 billion eur os ($190 billion) last year in Italy, a third of it on food.

Contract workers from

France's all-important food, catering and events industry held a protest Wednesday between the Louvre Museum and Champs-Elysees, saying the virus pandemic is killing their jobs. The symbolic flash mob demonstrat­ion included about 30 people dressed in black, simulating strangulat­ion with their ties and putting signs reading “sentenced to death” into a coffin.

To the south, Spain's sunny, beautiful Balearic Islands will allow thousands of German tourists to fly in for a twoweek trial that tests out how to balance the needs of Spain's vital tourism industry with new regulation­s to curb the country' s corona virus outbreak.

The trial that begins June 15 comes before the archipelag­o and the rest of the country reopen to internatio­nal tourism on July 1. The Spanish government is under heavy pressure to re-activate an industry that generates 12% of Spain's GDP and provides 2.6 million much-needed jobs.

Hungary said beginning Friday it would fully reopen its borders with Croatia, whose beaches on the Adriatic Coast are a favored destinatio­n.

Greece will allow internatio­nal flights to land at regional airports beginning July 1. Visitors arriving from airports not on the European air safety agency list of atrisk regions will be subjected to random spot coronaviru­s tests but will not face the

 ?? [LUCA BRUNO/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? A visitor takes a selfie as she admires Leonardo da Vinci's “The Last Supper”, Wednesday at Santa Maria delle Grazie church, in Milan, Italy.
[LUCA BRUNO/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] A visitor takes a selfie as she admires Leonardo da Vinci's “The Last Supper”, Wednesday at Santa Maria delle Grazie church, in Milan, Italy.

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