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Home / World

Covid 19 Delta: As Covid-19 sweeps Europe again, nations tighten rules and protests erupt

By Steven Erlanger
New York Times·
22 Nov, 2021 08:29 PM7 mins to read

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A Christmas market in Salzburg, Austria, was closed after the country entered a national lockdown. Photo / Laetitia Vancon, The New York Times

A Christmas market in Salzburg, Austria, was closed after the country entered a national lockdown. Photo / Laetitia Vancon, The New York Times

Austria leads in imposing tough new rules, as Europe fights resistance to vaccines and restrictions. Soon, a German official warned, almost everyone will be "vaccinated, recovered or dead."

Austria went into a major lockdown Monday to try to break the strong fourth wave of Covid-19 spreading across Europe, while the German health minister, Jens Spahn, warned that by the end of this winter "just about everyone in Germany will probably be either vaccinated, recovered or dead."

"Immunity will be reached," Spahn said at a Berlin news conference. "The question is whether it's via vaccination or infection, and we empathetically recommend the path via vaccination."

European governments are toughening their measures against Covid-19 in the face of soaring infection rates — more than 2 million new cases each week, the most since the pandemic began — and popular resistance, with violent protests over the weekend in numerous countries.

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Tens of thousands of people protested official crackdowns and vaccine requirements in Austria, the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Italy, Switzerland and Croatia, with scattered violence and police use of tear gas and water cannons. Some protesters were organised by far-right parties, but many were simply fed up with almost two years of intermittent state controls over their lives in the name of public health.

Ahmed Aboutaleb, mayor of Rotterdam, Netherlands, where some of the worst protests erupted, called them an "orgy of violence" and said football hooligans were believed to have been involved.

Mark Rutte, the Dutch prime minister, defended the right to demonstrate. "But what I will never accept is that idiots use sheer violence against the people who work for you and me every day to keep this country safe under the guise of: 'We are dissatisfied.' "

Europe is once again the epicentre of the coronavirus pandemic, accounting for more than half the world's reported Covid-19 deaths this month, according to the World Health Organisation. The four countries with the world's highest rates of reported new cases in the past week are Austria and three that border it, Slovakia, Slovenia and the Czech Republic; 27 of the top 29 are in Europe.

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With vaccination rates lagging and winter approaching, more governments are ringing alarm bells.

People lining up for vaccinations on Monday in Salzburg. Photo / Laetitia Vancon, The New York Times
People lining up for vaccinations on Monday in Salzburg. Photo / Laetitia Vancon, The New York Times

Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany told her Christian Democratic Party on Monday that the situation is "highly dramatic" and that the latest surge is worse than anything Germany had suffered so far.

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In what may be her last month as chancellor, as a new government is being formed, she warned that hospitals would soon be overwhelmed unless the fourth wave of the virus is broken and called on Germany's 16 states to enforce even tighter restrictions to block the spread.

Germany, like many European countries, is at the same time pressing for citizens to get booster shots. But it faces a dwindling supply of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine, which was partly developed in the country.

While the European Medicines Agency is poised to approve the vaccine for use on children ages 5 to 11 this week, first doses for children are not scheduled to be delivered to European Union countries until December 20, Spahn said.

On Thursday, 553,000 vaccines were administered in Germany in one day, a daily total not seen since early August. Three-quarters of those shots were boosters, according to the health ministry.

Neighbouring Austria on Monday began its fourth lockdown, one of the few in Western Europe since vaccines became widely available. Most stores, restaurants, sporting venues and cultural institutions shut, leaving the streets cold and quiet in the weeks before Christmas.

The lockdown, which only allows people to leave home to go to work or to procure groceries or medicines, will last at least 10 days and as many as 20 and comes after months of struggling attempts to halt the contagion through widespread testing and partial restrictions.

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Austria has also announced that vaccination will be compulsory as of February 1 — the first Western country to take that step and one of only a handful around the world. Some critics, including the editorial board of the Financial Times, have called it too high a price in terms of individual freedom and a sign of political failure.

Opposition to the measures has been led in Austria by the far-right Freedom Party, the third-largest in Parliament, which has been amplifying conspiracy theories about the vaccines, spreading doubt about their effectiveness and promoting ivermectin, a drug typically used to treat parasitic worms, mostly in horses, that has repeatedly failed against the coronavirus in clinical trials.

Alexander Schallenberg, Austria's chancellor, said he originally had opposed compulsory vaccination, but "we have too many political forces, flimsy vaccine skeptics and spreaders of fake news in this country."

On Saturday, some 40,000 Austrians marched in Vienna to protest the new measures.

France presents a contrast, in that President Emmanuel Macron has used more suasion. Proof of vaccination or a recent negative test is required to patronise restaurants and cinemas, which has encouraged many reluctant French to get vaccinated without a national mandate. But anti-vaccination groups remain active in France as well.

About 68 per cent of Germans and 66 per cent of Austrians have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19, and hospitals are mostly filled with those who have not been vaccinated at all. Early in the pandemic, scientists thought 70 per cent to 80 per cent vaccination might be enough for a population to reach "herd immunity." But the virus is now so widespread, with new variants arising and some vaccinated people suffering "breakthrough" infections, that many experts say herd immunity is unattainable.

Shopping in Salzburg on Monday. Photo / Laetitia Vancon, The New York Times
Shopping in Salzburg on Monday. Photo / Laetitia Vancon, The New York Times

Vaccination rates in most of Western Europe are higher, but the levels in Eastern Europe are far lower — from 59 per cent in the Czech Republic to 24 per cent in Bulgaria.

Belgium is highly vaccinated, at 75 per cent, but a rise in cases has caused the government to impose tighter restrictions, including more working from home and wider mandatory mask wearing. That prompted a protest in Brussels on Sunday of an estimated 35,000 people near the EU headquarters. Some protesters threw stones and set fires, police made more than 40 arrests, and three officers were hurt.

Alexander de Croo, prime minister of Belgium, called the violence "absolutely unacceptable." Like Rutte, he said Belgians were free to protest but that "the way in which some demonstrators behaved had nothing to do with freedom." He continued: "It had nothing to do with whether vaccination was a good thing or not; this was criminal behavior."

In Greece, the government said Monday that unvaccinated people would be barred from indoor spaces, including restaurants, cinemas, museums and gyms. Vaccination certificates for those older than 60 will be valid for only seven months, with people then required to get booster shots to maintain validity.

In Slovakia, the country's prime minister, Eduard Heger, announced a "lockdown for the unvaccinated" starting Monday. Slovakia and the Czech Republic banned unvaccinated people from restaurants, pubs, shopping malls, public events and stores, except for those selling essential goods.

The WHO chief for Europe, Hans Kluge, earlier this month blamed the region's woes on insufficient vaccination despite the availability of vaccines and said that the continent could see half a million more deaths by February.

"We must change our tactics, from reacting to surges of Covid-19 to preventing them from happening in the first place," he said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


Written by: Steven Erlanger
Photographs by: Laetitia Vancon
© 2021 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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