From the DW:
“Coronavirus latest: Germany to
partially close borders with several countries”
German authorities have decided
to reimpose controls on the nation's borders with France, Austria, Denmark,
Luxembourg, and Switzerland. Commuters would still be allowed to travel. Follow
DW for the latest. The German government is set to partially close borders with
France, Austria, Denmark, Luxembourg, and Switzerland on Monday
Updates in Universal Coordinated
Time (UTC/GMT)
18:57 Norway is set to aid its
economy with a support package of 100 billion Norwegian crowns ($9.7 billion
€8.7 billion). The authorities are also postponing the payment of payroll
taxes. "The government will do what's needed and spend the necessary funds
to secure the Norwegian economy and support Norwegian businesses, big and
small," Prime Minister Erna Solberg said.
18:41 Germany's federal police
chief Dieter Romann says that police officers have already been deployed and
enough officers are available to monitor the borders. "We are not closing
the borders, that is what they do in North Korea," he told reporters.
"We are controlling the border, that is something completely
different."
18:22 Germany now has 4,838
confirmed coronavirus cases, a jump of over 1,000 compared to Saturday. The
virus has so far killed 12 people, according to the Robert Koch Institute.
18:12 The coronavirus outbreak is
advancing "quickly and aggressively" and has not yet reached its
peak, according to German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer.
18:11 German nationals and
foreign nationals residing in Germany will be allowed to travel back to the
country, officials said.
18:09 Germany's Interior Minister
Horst Seehofer confirmed that the government would close borders with several
neighboring countries, including France, Austria, Denmark, Luxembourg, and
Switzerland. The crossing will stay open for people traveling to and from work,
and transporters delivering goods.
18:00 Pope Francis has visited
two Rome churches to pray for the end of the pandemic. The pontiff's trip
outside the Vatican also included a brief walk in Rome, according to Vatican
spokesman Matteo Bruni.
17:44 As the Catholic Church
prepares for Easter on April 12, the Vatican said that all "Liturgical
Celebrations of Holy Week" will take place this year"without the
physical presence of the faithful."
17:40 Scandinavian airline SAS
will temporarily lay off some 10,000 employees, or 90% of its workforce, as the
demand for plane tickets sinks due to the coronavirus.
17:31 The German state of Bavaria
will be closing bars, cinemas and swimming pools on Tuesday, according to
government sources cited by the DPA news agency. Many other businesses are to
follow suit on Wednesday. However, food shops, pharmacies, banks, drugstores,
and gas stations are set to stay open.
17:19 Italian officials say 368
people have died in the previous 24 hours, the biggest day-to-day jump since
the outbreak reached the country.
17:01 French luxury giant LVMH,
known for its flagship brand Louis Vuitton, said they would be making
hydroalcoholic gel to help with the hand sanitizer shortages caused by the
coronavirus outbreak. "LVMH will use the production lines of its perfume
and cosmetic brands ... to produce large quantities of hydroalcoholic gels from
Monday," LVMH said in a statement. quoted by the Reuters news agency. "These
gels will be delivered free of charge to the health authorities," LVMH
added.
16:56 Italy will receive another
140 medicinal ventilators and 5 million face masks from China, said Italian
Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio said on Sunday. The latest shipment comes after
China delivered some 30 tons of medical equipment, including masks and
respirators, on Thursday.
16:39 Germany is set to close its
boder with Denmark on Monday, the premier of the German state of
Schleswig-Holstein, Daniel Günther, told the DPA news agency. The German government has yet to comment on
multiple reports that borders with France, Austria, and Switzerland would also
be blocked starting Monday morning.
16:25 The US-based Johns Hopkins
University has provided an interactive map for all those interested in live
data on the coronavirus pandemic.
16:20 The EU has announced controls on
exporting masks and other protective medical equipment. Such goods can now
"only be exported to non-EU countries with the explicit authorization of
the EU governments," said the head of the EU Commission Ursula von der
Leyen.
16:18 Another 14 Britons dies of
coronavirus in the last 24 hours, bringing the death toll to 35, UK health
authorities said on Sunday. The country now has 1,372 diagnosed coronavirus
patients.
16:13 Germany's flagship airline
Lufthansa has set up charter flights to transport German holidaymakers and
cruise ship passengers back home. Most of the German nationals would be flown
from the Canary and Caribbean Islands.
16:06 The northern German state
of Schleswig-Holstein has decided to ban tourists from the islands in the North
Sea and the Baltic Sea starting on Monday morning, according to German media.
The measures are being taken to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
15:58 Following reports that US
President Donald Trump was trying to entice Germany's CureVac to create a
vaccine only for the US, the head of CureVac's biggest investor told Mannheimer
Morgen such a deal was out of the question.
15:29 All schools in the
Netherlands will close in order to curb the transmission of the coronavirus,
according to Dutch public broadcaster NOS.
15:16 New York City Mayor Bill de
Blasio said the US was playing a "huge game of catch-up" and urged
the Trump administration to take control of supply chain of medical supplies. "If
the federal government doesn't realize this is the equivalent of a war already,
there's no way that the states and localities can make all the adjustments we
need to," he told CNN.
15:14 Several popular sex clubs
in Amsterdam were closed on Sunday as the country faces the coronavirus
outbreak, according to the local Het Parool newspaper.
15:05 Tunisia has asked its
citizens to donate to fighting the coronavirus outbreak in that country. The
North African country has 18 confirmed coronavirus cases.
14:58 Residents of Austria should
only make social contact "with the people with whom they live," said
the country's chancellor, Sebastian Kurz. "Austrians are being summoned to
isolate themselves," he said in the statement. People who urgently need to
go outside "may do so, but only alone or with people living in the same
apartment," Kurz clarified in a separate statement to the APA news agency.
14:33 In Spain, the number of
people infected with the novel coronavirus has grown by a third in the last 24
hours and is now at 7,753, the authorities said on Sunday. Over 100 people have
died during the previous day, with the death toll now at 288.
14:15 Germany's borders to
Austria, Switzerland, and France will be closed starting Monday morning in a
bid to stem the spread of the coronavirus, according to the Spiegel magazine and
the mass-circulation Bild newspaper. However, German authorities will keep the
crossing open for commuters as well as the delivery of goods. There was no
immediate information on the possible closure of other border crossings,
including those towards Poland, Denmark, the Netherlands and the Czech
Republic.
13:51 The German premiere of
"Harry Potter and the Cursed Child" set to performed in Hamburg on
Sunday, has been delayed over the coronavirus outbreak.
13:40 UK football star Wayne
Rooney slammed the British government and football officials for treating
players like "guinea pigs." The 34-year Rooney believes the
authorities waited too long before halting football games in the England. "Why
did we wait until Friday? Why did it take (Arsenal couch) Mikel Arteta to get
ill for the game in England to do the right thing?" he asked in a column
for the Sunday Times.
13:23 Police in Greece have
arrested 96 people for breaking coronavirus lockdown terms since Thursday. Bars
and restaurants have been closed and Greece has started closing beach resorts.
All tourism accomodations are to be closed until April 30.
13:13 Austria has began enforcing
a nationwide curfew on Sunday, according to the APA news agency, with police
patrols deployed. Previously, Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said that gatherings of
five or more people would be banned. Starting Monday, violators would face a
fine of up to €2,000 ($2,220).
^ It seems officials shouldn’t make
generalized statements that will come back to haunt them. The Germans initially
said they respected the Schengen Area and the open borders and that wouldn’t
change and now they have to back-track on all of that. I can understand the
need to close borders, but it’s the arrogant way the Germans viewed the other
countries that closed their borders first and now the Germans are doing the
same. It would be better for officials (German or not) to make statements that
say something to the effect that they don’t see a need right now to close the
borders (or schools, etc.) but that they may have to re-evaluate things if the
situation changes. Then they are covered for the future. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/coronavirus-latest-germany-to-partially-close-borders-with-several-countries/a-52777896
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