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The latest coronavirus developments in Europe

March 5, 2020

COVID-19 continues to spread across Europe, and governments are taking action with travel advisories and school closures. There are also fears of a recession as stock markets tumble. DW summarizes the latest here.

https://p.dw.com/p/3Ywa8
A woman wears a mask in front of the eifel tower
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/J. Gilles

As of Friday morning, Europe has recorded 5,544 COVID-19 cases, according to the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control. Countries across the continent are reporting new cases and developments are moving fast. Here is a round-up of the latest:

Germany: Cases continue to increase 

Confirmed cases: 534  Active cases: 528  Death toll: 0

The Robert Koch Institute, a German public health institution, said Friday that 134 new COVID-19 cases have been confirmed over the past 24 hours in Germany.

This brings the total number of cases to 534, up from Thursday's number of 400. The most-populous state of North Rhine-Westphalia has the highest number of cases at 281. The southern states of Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria have 91 and 79 cases, respectively. There are scattered cases in other regions.

On Friday, Germany's Foreign Ministry issued an advisory against all but essential travel to Italy's alpine South Tyrol region, a popular winter sports destination. 

Health Minister Jens Spahn said Friday that Germany does not yet consider it necessary to limit free movement across borders. 

Germany has banned the export of medical gear and adjusted a national travel advisory to warn of an "elevated quarantine risk" associated with cruise ship travel.

The virus is also causing economic woes in Germany . The Federation of German industries said the virus had increased the risk of the country falling into recession.

Lufthansa Group and its subsidiaries are canceling all flights to Israel and reducing domestic flight services as Israel barred entry to non-resident arrivals from Germany, France, Spain, Austria and Switzerland.

Germany has not announced a blanket closure of schools and kindergartens.

A closed kindergarten
Germany has not ruled out widespread closures of kindergartens in the futureImage: Getty Images/AFP/I. Fassbender

Italy: Europe's hardest-hit country

Confirmed cases: 3,858  Active cases: 3,296  Death toll: 148

Deaths from the virus rose by 41 from Wednesday to Thursday. 

The country has been the worst hit in Europe after COVID-19 began spreading in towns across the country's northern regions of Lombardy and Veneto.

All schools and universities have been closed across the country and all major sporting events will be held behind closed doors until April.

The Vatican confirmed its first COVID-19 case on Friday in a patient at the small city-state's outpatient health clinic. 

Italy's bishops ordered churches in affected areas not to hold mass during the week. The Vatican said it was considering changes to Pope Francis' schedule "to avoid the dissemination" of the virus, but it did not say whether the pope would stop shaking hands. 

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte postponed a constitutional referendum scheduled for March 29. Italy's foreign minister criticized US broadcaster CNN, accusing it of suggesting that the world was catching the virus from Italy.

The country has set aside €7.5 billion ($8.4 billion) to help the economy with losses due to coronavirus — just days ago the minister had promised a €3.6 billion package but it provoked outcry in Italy's media.

The Netherlands: First death reported 

Confirmed cases: 82  Active cases: 81 Death toll: 1

On Friday, health officials in the Netherlands reported the first death related to COVID-19 in the country. An 86-year-old man died at a hospital in the port city of Rotterdam. Health officials said the source of his contamination was unknown. The Netherlands confirmed its first COVID-19 case on February 24, and as of Thursday, there were 82 confirmed cases in total.

Tourists wearing facemasks in Paris holding an umbrellla
The famous Paris Le Louvre museum re-oppened despite coronacase infection numbers rising in France.Image: Reuters/B. Tessier

France: Price cap on hand sanitizer

Confirmed cases: 423  Active cases: 359  Death toll: 7

On Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron urged French citizens to avoid visiting their relatives in retirement homes "as much as possible" to avoid spreading the coronavirus. 

Confirmed cases in the France rose by 138 in 24 hours on Thursday and included a member of the country's National Assembly. 

Paris' Louvre Museum — the home to the famous Mona Lisa painting — has re-opened. Employees had been worried about catching the virus from tourists.

France announced measures to stop profiteering from the coronavirus, and put a price cap on the cost of hand sanitizer. From Friday, no one in France will have to pay more than €3 for 100 milliliters or more than €2 for 40 milliliters.

Spain and Portugal: Madrid bears the brunt in Spain

Spain: Confirmed cases: 259 Active cases: 253 Death toll: 3

Portugal: Confirmed cases: 9  Active cases: 9  Death toll: 0

Madrid has emerged as the epicenter of the virus in Spain. The country's health authorities reported 10 new cases of the virus on Thursday, linked to a Madrid nursing home.

There are plans to roll out preventative measures across all of the capital city's care homes, including setting up isolation zones and barring people with symptoms from communal areas.

Some guests in quarantine at the hotel on the Spanish island of Tenerife were allowed to leave after testing negative for the virus but about 400 others are still unable to go home.

Portugal has reported far fewer infections than its neighbor, even after authorities confirmed its first two cases on Monday.

Read moreCoronavirus, cold, or flu symptoms? When you should be worried

Coronavirus spreads in Italy and elsewhere

UK and Switzerland: First deaths from the virus

UK: Confirmed cases: 116  Active cases: 106  Death toll: 1

Switzerland: Confirmed cases: 118 Active cases: 114  Death toll: 1

On Thursday, the UK reported its first death from the virus. The patient is understood to be a woman in her 70s with underlying health conditions. People diagnosed with the virus rose by more than 30 in since Wednesday.

The spokesperson for the country's government said that it was "highly likely the virus is going to spread in a significant way."

Switzerland also recorded its first death on Thursday too — the patient was another woman in her 70s. The country has banned all large public events of more than 1,000 people until mid-March in a bid to halt the spread of the virus.

Central and eastern Europe: Escaping the worst, so far

Countries in central and eastern Europe have reportedly relatively few cases of COVID-19. Poland, Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania and North Macedonia have only reported one case each. Slovakia and Serbia confirmed their first cases on Friday. 

Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis said Friday that the country's citizens should avoid travel to anywhere in Italy and recommended anyone returning from Italy should self quarantine for 14 days. The country has so far confirmed 12 COVID-19 cases. 

Economic impacts in Europe 

Stock markets in several European countries dropped Friday due to fear from investors of a projected global economic downturn due to the coronavirus. In morning trading, Paris dropped 3.9%, Frankfurt and Milan dropped 3.7% each, Madrid lost  3.4% and London shed 3.3%.

wmr,kmm/rt (Reuters, AP, AFP, dpa)

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