Europe’s COVID-19 situation worsening, warns EU | Daily News

Europe’s COVID-19 situation worsening, warns EU

European Commissioner for Health Stella Kyriakides adjusts her face mask as she attends a news conference on the updated risk assessment for the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, in Brussels.- AFP
European Commissioner for Health Stella Kyriakides adjusts her face mask as she attends a news conference on the updated risk assessment for the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, in Brussels.- AFP

SWEDEN: The European Union (EU) raised the alarm on COVID-19 coronavirus saying the epidemic is worse now than at the March peak in several member countries, as governments in Europe and beyond reimpose drastic restrictions.

EU Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides warned that in “some member states, the situation is now even worse than during the peak in March.”

“This is a real cause for concern,” she said, urging new measures to head off a second wave of the virus, which has killed nearly a million people worldwide since the outbreak emerged in China late last year.

The death rate has not returned to the levels seen earlier this year, but cases of new infections are soaring once again in many areas of the bloc.

In a statement, the EU’s Stockholm-based disease control agency pointed to Spain, Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Malta as countries of particularly “high concern.”

The seven have “an increased proportion of hospitalised and severe cases” among older people and “increasing or high death notification rates are already observed... or may be observed soon,” said the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC).

Other countries such as France and Britain have observed rising infection rates primarily among younger people, who are less at risk of developing severe symptoms.

But these too are on a worrying path as older people are increasingly infected, the ECDC said.

Israel and France were among the latest nations to tighten infection control measures, shuttering restaurants, workplaces or gyms as businesses already hammered by lockdowns at the start of the year struggle to stay afloat.

France’s Health Minister on Wednesday announced drastic restrictions in some particularly hard-hit areas of the country.

In the southern city of Marseille, bars, restaurants and gyms will close while bars in Paris and 10 other cities will close at 10:00 pm. Gyms will also be shuttered in the capital.

Israel, which has the world’s highest coronavirus infection rate as a proportion of its population, has gone even further.

Last week, it imposed a second nationwide lockdown that included school closures and restrictions on work and leisure.

But realising that wasn’t enough, with some hospitals reaching capacity, it decided to toughen its measures still further.

The new rules will close the vast majority of workplaces, shutter markets and further limit prayers and demonstrations.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said she had lodged a formal protest over her city’s new restrictions, particularly the closure of gyms.

“How will the fact that we can no longer exercise help us, while sport is an important part of keeping us healthy with strong immune systems?”, she said.

Health experts also warned that governments risked losing the trust of the population.

Hagai Levine, an epidemiologist who is part of Israel’s anti-coronavirus taskforce, said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s rush to ease the first lockdown caused the current crisis.

In Russia, a vaccine has already been approved even though full clinical trials have yet to be completed, raising concerns about its safety.

Russian cosmonauts set to blast off for the International Space Station (ISS) said it was too early to get the vaccine touted by President Vladimir Putin.

“I’d personally say that I would not get vaccinated because I tread very carefully on this issue,” said Sergei Ryzhikov, the leader of the next expedition to the ISS in October.

But on a rare positive note, Olympic boss Thomas Bach said the Tokyo Games could take place next year even without a vaccine. -AFP