Merkel Warns Coronavirus Crisis 'Still Just the Beginning'

"We'll
have to live with this virus for a long time," Ms Merkel told parliament
ahead of an EU summit, via videolink.
She
said Germany should be ready to "make very different, meaning much higher
contributions to the EU budget".
The
video summit - the EU's fourth on coronavirus - is now under way.
EU
leaders are expected to sign off on a new €540bn (£470bn; $575bn) emergency
fund to protect European workers, businesses and countries worst affected by
the coronavirus outbreak. The details are yet to be worked out.
The
€540bn would be released through EU institutions that already exist, including
the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), the main bailout fund set up in
response to the 2008 financial crisis.
European Council President Charles Michel told leaders they should
aim to start releasing the funds by 1 June.
But
a thornier issue is how much extra to commit to the EU budget to deal with this
crisis, and how much the 27 member states will spend jointly. There are plans
for a special recovery fund, like the post-1945 Marshall Plan.
Italy
and some other states want EU help in aid grants, not loans. The scale of the
crisis is such, they argue, that at least €1.5 trillion will be needed.
Mrs
Merkel said extra EU budget funds should be provided "in a spirit of solidarity"
and for a limited time.
Italy, at the
epicentre of the pandemic in Europe, has been especially vocal in urging its EU
partners to jointly guarantee debt.
But
Germany, the Netherlands and Austria oppose any mutualisation of debt, in the
form of so-called "coronabonds". Under current EU rules countries
cannot be made liable for each other's debts.
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| EU summit chairman Charles Michel videoconferencing with leaders |
The old rifts from
the eurozone crisis of 2009 - a supposedly frugal northern Europe versus a
spendthrift south - have re-emerged with this outbreak.
The view from Rome
is that a shared crisis needs a shared solution. Facing fierce opposition
mainly from Germany and the Netherlands, Italy may no longer be wedded to its
idea of "coronabonds" - debt mutualisation - but is still pushing for
a financial package that does not penalise any single economy. That, after all,
is the spirit of the common market that Italy helped create.
Many
Italians feel abandoned by an EU that has hoarded protective equipment and
closed borders.
Polls
show anti-EU feeling is at its highest ever here. The leader of the hard-right
Brothers of Italy party, Giorgia Meloni, told me the EU had shown its
inadequacy and distance from the solidarity its members craved, peddling the
idea of Italy as a beggar, wasting its money.
"The
EU exists thanks to Italy," she said. "But it's now a system that
favours others." Hers is the party steadily rising in the polls.
French President
Emmanuel Macron has sided with Italy and Spain in this crisis, warning that it
threatens the very existence of the EU. Italy, Spain and France - in that order
- have the highest European death tolls from Covid-19, each above 20,000.
On
Thursday German officials said coronavirus cases nationally had risen to 148,046,
and the number of deaths linked to Covid-19 had risen by 215 to 5,094.
Mrs
Merkel said "it's the biggest challenge since World War Two, for the life
and health of our people".
She urged
"maximum discipline", to avoid stop-start lockdowns.
"We
must not waste what has been achieved already," she said, praising the
efficiency of Germany's healthcare system and the armed forces' role.
"The
question of how we can prevent the virus from overwhelming our health system
and subsequently costing the lives of countless people, this question will for
a long time be the central question for politics in Germany and Europe."
The World Health
Organization (WHO) says care home residents account for up to half of Covid-19
deaths in Europe, which is "a deeply concerning picture".
Mrs
Merkel said Europe must strengthen its capacity to produce specialised medical
kit, instead of depending on global supplies, which are now very stretched.
She
also called the WHO an indispensable partner in the fight against the virus.
President Donald Trump has suspended US funding of the body.
"I
know how difficult the restrictions are, it's a challenge to democracy, it
limits our democratic rights," she said, adding that democratic
transparency, such as a free press, helped to make the situation tolerable.
"It's
amazing how much understanding people have shown for each other," she
said. MPs frequently applauded her.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe

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