Coronavirus: EU Entry Ban Hits Travellers as Lockdown Widens
Travellers
from outside the EU are being turned away from airports and borders, after the
27-country bloc imposed a 30-day ban to halt the spread of coronavirus.
A group
flying in from Turkey was turned away from Germany’s biggest airport in
Frankfurt late on Tuesday, DPA news agency reports.
EU leaders
agreed that internal borders that have been erected in recent days should come
down.
More than
185,000 people have been infected worldwide, according to the World Health
Organization. Europe has been identified by the WHO as now the “epicentre of
the epidemic”. Latest figures say some 3,400 people have died in Europe alone.
Belgium is
the latest EU country to introduce a lockdown for its 11.4 million citizens.
People have
been urged to stay at home as much as possible and only essential travel will
be allowed. Most shops will close, but physical activity is allowed as long as
people respect social distancing.
The 30-day
entry ban will not affect Europeans going home or cross-border workers. UK
citizens are also not affected by it because an interim Brexit deal still ties
the UK to EU rules.
The ban
specifically covers all EU states as well as countries within the Schengen
border-free zone, including Iceland, Switzerland, Norway and Liechtenstein.
All citizens
will be given help returning home, and Germany on Wednesday said it would
continue a drive to fly home tens of thousands of tourists stranded abroad,
from Morocco and Egypt to the Philippines and Argentina.
The Robert
Koch Institute (RKI), the scientific body advising the government on health
issues, has warned that Germany could see up to 10 million cases of coronavirus
infections within the next two to three months unless the current containment measures
are strictly followed.
Individual
European governments have begun erecting patrols to stop citizens from other
countries from entering.
Patrols
appeared on Tuesday on the Spanish border with France, and Poland has seen
traffic jams of up to 50km (31 miles) at some of its crossings as part of its
health measures.
“It is
absolutely crucial that we unblock the situation, because we know that too many
people are stranded within the European Union and have a problem to go back
home,” said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
Some people
are having to wait for more than 24 hours following the introduction of checks
at midnight on Saturday.
Foreigners
are temporarily banned from entering the country and returning Polish citizens
must be quarantined for 14 days. Border guards wearing protective suits and
face masks are taking the temperature of everyone crossing the border.
Thousands of
foreigners are leaving Poland to return home and thousands of Poles are trying
to get back in.
And then
there are the trucks. The borders are still open to goods, but the authorities
did not create special lanes for truck drivers to cross, so everyone is stuck
in one line.
At the
crossing in Jedrzychowice on the German border on Wednesday morning, people
have been stuck in their vehicles overnight, many with nothing to eat or drink
and with no access to toilets.
In France, the
number of confirmed cases in France grew by more than 16% on Tuesday, reaching
7,730, The death toll rose to 175, with 7% of the dead aged under 65.
In the UK,
the number of dead has reached 71.
The number
of confirmed cases in Spain has soared to more than 13,700.
Italy, which
has registered the most cases outside China at more than 31,500, announced
another surge in deaths on Tuesday, from 2,150 to 2,503.
Belgium announced
four more deaths on Wednesday bringing the overall number to 14, with 243 new
cases.
In Germany, RKI
reports 8,198 cases with 12 deaths. Chancellor Merkel is to make the unusual
step of speaking to the nation in a TV address later on Wednesday. She is not
expected to announce new measures, but rather appeal to citizens to help fight
the virus.
Mrs von der
Leyen told reporters on Tuesday that she hoped a vaccine could be available by
autumn. Her comments are out of step with health officials elsewhere, but she
said there were means to speed up bureaucratic processes that were normally
slow and difficult.
The
Commission leader has also given an interview with German tabloid Bild, in
which she said: “I think that all of us us who are not experts initially
underestimated the coronavirus."
She accepted
it was a “worrying enemy” but said she did not see the fight against it as a
war. Measures that sounded “drastic, draconian” two weeks ago, she said, were
now accepted as necessary.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
No comments