Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Protests erupt over virus limits in Austria, Italy, Croatia

- By Emily Schultheis and Kirsten Grieshaber

VIENNA — Tens of thousands of protesters, many from far- right groups, marched through Vienna on Saturday after the Austrian government announced a nationwide lockdown beginning Monday to contain skyrocketi­ng coronaviru­s infections.

Demonstrat­ions against virus restrictio­ns also took place in Switzerlan­d, Croatia, Italy, Northern Ireland and the Netherland­s on Saturday, a day after Dutch police opened fire on protesters and seven people were injured in rioting that erupted in Rotterdam. Protesters rallied against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and mandatory COVID-19 passes needed in many European countries to enter restaurant­s, Christmas markets or sports events, as well as mandatory vaccinatio­ns.

The Austrian lockdown will start Monday and comes as average daily deaths have tripled in recent weeks and hospitals in heavily hit states have warned that intensive care units are reaching capacity. The lockdown will last at least 10 days but could go up to 20, officials said. People will be able to leave their homes only for specific reasons, including buying groceries, going to the doctor or exercising.

The government also will make vaccinatio­ns mandatory starting Feb. 1. Not quite 66% of Austria’s 8.9 million people are fully vaccinated, one of the lowest rates in Western Europe.

Saturday’s march started off at Vienna’s massive Heldenplat­z square. Chanting “Resistance!” and blowing whistles, protesters moved down the city’s inner ring road. Many waved Austrian flags and carried signs mocking Chancellor Alexander Schallenbe­rg and Health Minister Wolfgang Mueckstein. Some wore doctor’s scrubs; others donned tinfoil hats. Most signs focused on the vaccine mandate: “My Body, My Choice,” read one. “We’re Standing Up for Our Kids!” said another.

Among those protesting were members of far-right and extreme-right parties and groups, including the far-right Freedom Party, the anti-vaccine MFG party and the extreme-right Identitari­ans.

About 1,300 police officers were on duty, and 35,000 protesters participat­ed in different marches across the city, police said. Police said several protesters were detained but didn’t give specific numbers. Later Saturday night, protesters threw bottles and beer cans and fired pyrotechni­cs at police, who then used pepper spray to disperse the crowds.

Freedom Party leader Herbert Kickl, who recently tested positive for COVID-19, appeared via video, denouncing what he called “totalitari­an” measures from a government “that believes it should think and decide for us.”

Mr. Schallenbe­rg apologized to all vaccinated people on Friday, saying it wasn’t fair they had to suffer under the renewed lockdown restrictio­ns.

“I’m sorry to take this drastic step,” he said on public broadcaste­r ORF.

In neighborin­g Switzerlan­d, 2,000 people protested an upcoming referendum on whether to approve the government’s COVID-19 restrictio­ns law, claiming it was discrimina­tory, public broadcaste­r SRF reported.

A day after the Rotterdam rioting, thousands gathered on Amsterdam’s central Dam Square, despite organizers calling off the protest. They walked peacefully through the streets, closely monitored by police.

“This policy [anti-coronaviru­s measures] makes a lot of conflicts between the people,” Hugo Gietelink, of Amsterdam, told The Associated Press. “I think it is very important that the vaccinated and non-vaccinated have to makea friendship again.”

A few hundred people also marched through the southern Dutch city of Breda. One organizer, Joost Eras, told broadcaste­r NOS he didn’t expect violence after consulting with police.

“We certainly don’t support what happened in Rotterdam. We were shocked by it,” hesaid.

In Italy, 3,000 turned out in the capital’s Circus Maximus, a field where in ancient times Romans staged popular entertainm­ent, to protest against “Green Pass” certificat­es required at workplaces, restaurant­s, cinemas, theaters, sports venues and gyms, as well as for long-distance train, bus or ferry travel.

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