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When do you expect your area to go back to business as usual?

When do you expect your area to go back to business as usual?


  • Total voters
    18
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MenInG

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Some reports of Spain and Italy thinking of restarting some economic activity seem to indicate that we are heading back to normalcy but how long will it take for things to go back to normal in the area where you live in?
 
Not any time soon, but i think government should allow some factory and garments looms in Faisalabad to run with some terms and conditions and preventions in place, people are literally gonna die of hunger and small business are really suffering the worst, as of general re opening, i don't think it Will be possible before June, we haven't any where near our peak and testing rate is shambles, cut thankfully atleast for now death rate is under control.Just hope wo don't get to Europe level or else it will be massacre.
 
Europe needs to get back on its feet asap - but a tough decision for the Govts.
 
It’s hard to tell, but I could see the resumption of some activities by May.
 
People have to earn a living afterall, I expect the world collectively deciding to ditch lockdowns in 1-3 months and just enforcing stricter precautions such as mandatory masks in public. Governments should hold a parade and 21 gun salute for the nation of China and their government for giving us the gift of coronavirus.
 
In the UK, normalcy seems a long way off yet, an easing of restrictions by May/June appears more realistic. If lockdowns and travel restrictions go beyond this, it will really hurt a lot of industries such as the aviation sector.
 
In the UK, normalcy seems a long way off yet, an easing of restrictions by May/June appears more realistic. If lockdowns and travel restrictions go beyond this, it will really hurt a lot of industries such as the aviation sector.

What part of the UK do you live in mate? We have had the most jokes Lockdown in the history of lockdowns.

60% of offices in london are still operating. Parks and other places are filled with people. Everyone enjoys trips to the supermarket and they also enjoy the Thursday clap for the NHS.

We have been copying everyone else and I expect similar steps to France
 
What part of the UK do you live in mate? We have had the most jokes Lockdown in the history of lockdowns.

60% of offices in london are still operating. Parks and other places are filled with people. Everyone enjoys trips to the supermarket and they also enjoy the Thursday clap for the NHS.

We have been copying everyone else and I expect similar steps to France

i live on the outskirts of the city and it is deserted, i go out to walk, and every other day take a longer route and can walk for miles seeing maybe one or two people. none of my friends are going into the office.

in terms of apparent normalcy i reckon the lockdown will pbly last 6 more weeks, and then a few weeks transition period, maybe around 3 months.

however it terms of the deeper effect this will have on the encouragement to work from home and discouragement towards travel, and generally making people more scared and less free, i think the ramifications will last for a long time.
 
i live on the outskirts of the city and it is deserted, i go out to walk, and every other day take a longer route and can walk for miles seeing maybe one or two people. none of my friends are going into the office.

in terms of apparent normalcy i reckon the lockdown will pbly last 6 more weeks, and then a few weeks transition period, maybe around 3 months.

however it terms of the deeper effect this will have on the encouragement to work from home and discouragement towards travel, and generally making people more scared and less free, i think the ramifications will last for a long time.

I wouldn’t really expect anything to be going on on the outskirts of London anyways.

In london, where I live which is closer to central london, I have not felt that we are completely shut down at all. It seems like every day is just a Sunday.

The Tube has been operating daily also. Government is under severe strain now that France, Spain and Italy have all outlined exit plans, most of them are being executed early May. Denmark and Norway did their bit and are back on track to re open.

UK isn’t going to lose out more than these countries. They will probably be the first country to be back to full routine and that too by August.
 
What part of the UK do you live in mate? We have had the most jokes Lockdown in the history of lockdowns.

60% of offices in london are still operating. Parks and other places are filled with people. Everyone enjoys trips to the supermarket and they also enjoy the Thursday clap for the NHS.

We have been copying everyone else and I expect similar steps to France

Manchester which is largely following the advice, not good to hear what's happening in London. Since London is a major hub for the services industry, this may explain why a lot of offices are still open but should be skeleton staff only to satisfy the social distancing guidelines.

There is no excuse for the public to be hanging out at parks etc, they should be dealt with firmly but you're always going to get some rotten apples in a barrel full.
 
Things are looking bleak in Germany. Most probably 3-4 months until further notice.

Lol. So we have been fed lies about Germany being the best European country to tackle this? Germany is going to be opening everything in mid May
 
Very hard to predict and [MENTION=138254]Syed1[/MENTION] yes we have to thank China for that. Yes sir .
 
Manchester which is largely following the advice, not good to hear what's happening in London. Since London is a major hub for the services industry, this may explain why a lot of offices are still open but should be skeleton staff only to satisfy the social distancing guidelines.

There is no excuse for the public to be hanging out at parks etc, they should be dealt with firmly but you're always going to get some rotten apples in a barrel full.

The police has strolled past me maybe 2-3 times when I am out on my daily walk and chilling on a bench near the river. Not a word and they just go on their merry way.

Londoners have enjoyed this lockdown a lot, they wish it continues forever because it’s more like a public holiday. Where I live, no one really cares about their jobs or rent etc. All happy families clapping the NHS every Thursday
 
Manchester which is largely following the advice, not good to hear what's happening in London. Since London is a major hub for the services industry, this may explain why a lot of offices are still open but should be skeleton staff only to satisfy the social distancing guidelines.

There is no excuse for the public to be hanging out at parks etc, they should be dealt with firmly but you're always going to get some rotten apples in a barrel full.

Hello from a fellow Mancunian though I live and work in Liverpool now.

I realised that the lockdown was much stricter in Liverpool as compared to Manchester. There was a lot more Police in lpool too as compared to Manchester.
 
The police has strolled past me maybe 2-3 times when I am out on my daily walk and chilling on a bench near the river. Not a word and they just go on their merry way.

Londoners have enjoyed this lockdown a lot, they wish it continues forever because it’s more like a public holiday. Where I live, no one really cares about their jobs or rent etc. All happy families clapping the NHS every Thursday

My cousin who's working in the NHS has the same sentiments. Keeps messaging me with he's out on the front line battling this deadly disease while the public are enjoying free holidays and free money.
 
Hello from a fellow Mancunian though I live and work in Liverpool now.

I realised that the lockdown was much stricter in Liverpool as compared to Manchester. There was a lot more Police in lpool too as compared to Manchester.

Hello, yes I think with the death toll still rising, the gravity of the situation will eventually reach the people that aren't taking it seriously.
 
By June a lot of restrictions will come off, regardless of deaths continuing. By July flights should be back to some normality.

Unless we get the second wave which could be 10X worse that this.
 
Poland to start easing restrictions on economy from April 19

Poland will start easing restrictions on its economy from April 19, health minister Lukasz Szumowski said, according to Reuters.

“From the April 19 we will slowly start unfreezing the economy,” he told Polish private radio station RMF FM.
 
New York: New York, California and other states plan for reopening as coronavirus crisis eases
Ten U.S. governors on the east and west coasts banded together on Monday in two regional pacts to coordinate gradual economic reopenings as the coronavirus crisis finally appeared to be ebbing.
 
Doesn't matter what governments do, expect strong economic recession. It's gonna be on par with the great depression! :trump

At least, no one will starve this time (in 1st/2nd world countries, that is!).
 
Looks like at least another 4 weeks of lockdown in its current format.

Frustrating, but it's for the best I guess.
 
So difficult to imagine what it will be like to be back to normal - but will there be a normal anymore?
 
Time for a haircut? Iceland to begin lifting lockdown in May

Iceland plans to ease some of its coronavirus lockdown restrictions by allowing hair salons, museums and schools to reopen in early May, but its government said night clubs, gyms, bars and swimming pools will remain closed.

Measures such as a two-meter social distancing rule would remain in place, while the limit on large gatherings would be loosened from 20 to 50 people on May 4, the Atlantic island’s government said in a statement on Tuesday.

“The outbreak is thought to have reached its peak and is now moving down, as a result of wide-ranging containment and mitigation measures,” it said.

Iceland’s chief epidemiologist said last week the coronavirus outbreak was showing clear signs of slowing, after the country employed a rigorous testing and tracing strategy.

The government says more than 1,700 Icelanders have been diagnosed with the coronavirus and over 100 have been hospitalized.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...o-begin-lifting-lockdown-in-may-idUSKCN21W2Q8
 
Denmark will begin reopening nursery and primary schools on Wednesday, as the country takes its first steps towards easing restrictions.

New rules mean that children will be kept further apart than usual, there'll be strict cleaning regimes, and where possible, lessons will be held outside.

Other lockdown restrictions remain in place, but the government said the numbers of people in hospital had been falling, and further measures might be lifted soon. Denmark has more than 6,700 positive tests and around 300 deaths.

Meanwhile, Germany's government will discuss a possible lifting of some of its measures on Wednesday.
 
Germany set to ease rules on movement from 3 May

As Denmark starts reopening schools for under 11s, German Chancellor Angela Merkel is set to hold talks with the leaders of the country's 16 states on when to relax coronavirus restrictions.

According to German media, the federal government in Berlin wants restrictions on movement to last until at least 3 May although some shops will be able to reopen under strict rules from 20 April.

Germany has not been as badly hit as other countries in Western Europe, with 3,254 deaths recorded by the RKI public health institute, including 285 in the past 24 hours.

Austria allowed some shops to open on Tuesday, and Germany may do the same.
 
Lockdowns should be lifted in two-week stages to stem COVID-19 spread: WHO

Countries that ease restrictions imposed to fight the spread of the coronavirus should wait at least two weeks to evaluate the impact of such changes before easing again, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday.
 
Takeaway food chains in the UK are planning to reopen some stores closed during the pandemic.

Pret a Manger has said it will reopen 10 stores close to hospitals in London for takeaway and delivery only and will be offering a 50% discount to NHS workers.

Pret chief executive Pano Christou said the move "will help give frontline healthcare workers better access to freshly prepared food".

Fast food-chain KFC has reopened 11 stores for delivery over the last week and will consider opening more but a spokeswoman said "if we can’t do it responsibly – we won’t do it all".

Burger King is rumoured to be considering a similar move.
 
Germany plans cautious first steps to restart public life

Germany plans to let smaller shops reopen next week after a weeks-long coronavirus shutdown and to start reopening schools in early May, but Europe's biggest economy is keeping strict social distancing rules in place for now, AP reports.

After much-anticipated talks on Wednesday with Germany's 16 state governors, Chancellor Angela Merkel set out a plan for the first steps of a cautious restart of public life following neighbouring Austria and Denmark and other countries in launching a slow loosening of restrictions.
 
Life in the UK will not go straight back to normal when coronavirus lockdown measures are eased, the health secretary has said.
Matt Hancock warned it would "take time" for the enforced social distancing measures to be fully phased out.

Later today the government is expected to announce an extension to the three-week emergency "stay at home" rules in a bid to suppress the COVID-19 outbreak.

Cabinet ministers will get a briefing on the latest scientific and medical advice via video conference this morning, before a special meeting of the government's emergency committee known as COBRA is chaired by stand-in prime minister Dominic Raab.

The first secretary of state is deputising for Boris Johnson while he recovers from coronavirus with his pregnant fiancee in the countryside retreat of Chequers.
 
Well it's as you were for at least 3 more weeks in the UK.
 
Depressing by UK. No exit strategy/plans being mentioned at all
 
Denmark will allow some small businesses like hairdressers, beauty salons and driving schools to open on 20 April, the government said on Friday.

"No one wants to keep Denmark closed a day longer than is absolutely necessary," Prime Minister Mette Frederikse said.

The move comes after several other European countries, including Austria and Germany, announced a similar easing of their lockdown measures.

On Wednesday, Denmark already allowed some nurseries and primary schools to reopen after infection rates steadied.

The country will keep its borders shut though and other curbs on restaurants, bars and gyms remain in place, as does a ban on large public gatherings.

Denmark has around 7,000 confirmed infections and 321 deaths.
 
Hairdressers, small shops prepare to reopen in Portugal, students summoned to the fields

Portugal is preparing to gradually lift some lockdown measures next month as the coronavirus outbreak slows, with small neighbourhood shops, hairdressers and childcare centres likely to be first on the list to re-open.

Prime Minister Antonio Costa told parliament on Thursday that he wanted those services to resume next month and associations representing Portugal’s personal care sector said on Friday they were preparing measures to be able to reopen hairdressers and beauty salons. [nL5N2C45WU]

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Agriculture issued a statement encouraging students to take up jobs in agriculture with the promise of no income tax on earnings up to 2,194 euros during the summer holidays, after producers of berries and other fruits expressed concerns about a lack of manual labour in the run-up to the harvest season.

Workers temporarily furloughed from their jobs during the coronavirus crisis can also apply to work in the fields, the ministry said.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...students-summoned-to-the-fields-idUKKBN21Z2ZZ
 
The UK government wants to make sure it makes a "balanced judgement" about which lockdown measures can be relaxed and when, a senior minister has said.

Michael Gove told the BBC's Andrew Marr: "We want to make sure that we make a balanced judgement about which restrictions can be relaxed at what time."

He dismissed reports that schools would return on 11 May but added that the hospitality sector would be among the last to see restrictions lifted.

We reported earlier that the government had been criticised for missing a number of opportunities to reduce the impact of coronavirus.

Addressing the reports, Mr Gove said it was "grotesque" to portray Prime Minister Boris Johnson "as though not caring about this".

The Sunday Times reports that the PM missed five meetings of the emergency Cobra committee - something Mr Gove shook off, saying it was normal for the nation's leader not to attend every meeting.

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All these lockdowns are literally useless, people i see all over still going out unneccessarily, meeting families/friends, then at shops/stores you have long arsed social distanced lines, but once inside you have people breathing down your necks, or imbsicles that come to stores to do window shopping instead of essential shopping... its just pathetic overall...
 
With the number of new infections at a steady low for the past days, South Korea is beginning to lift some restrictions.

That means some sporting events will be allowed to kick off. Guidelines for churches will also be relaxed.

The country's baseball league, for instance, will resume its games - although without an audience in the stands. And churches will be allowed to restart operations as long as they comply with disinfection guidelines.

South Korea was the first country to be severely hit outside of China but over the past weeks it has successfully driven new infections to very low levels. On Monday, only 13 new cases were reported.
 
All these lockdowns are literally useless, people i see all over still going out unneccessarily, meeting families/friends, then at shops/stores you have long arsed social distanced lines, but once inside you have people breathing down your necks, or imbsicles that come to stores to do window shopping instead of essential shopping... its just pathetic overall...

The vast majority of rules are kind of public perception management and virtue signaling
Lockdowns help when
1) Its in early stages
2) One particular area is badly affected, e.g. Wuhan, North Italy, NYC

Otherwise you see a lot of rules, in fact the more rules there are, the happier people become because they think "something is being done".

For e.g. some places have introduced rule that everyone must wear gloves when going out. Average Joe is delighted he is "protecting" himself, but if he goes to 5 places while wearing the gloves, there is every chance "germs" are being transmitted.

The 2m thing is another such thing; so are you going to be safe and healthy at 2.1m, but contract the virus at 1.9m ? Nope

In some places, jogging is banned because it is a dangerous activity which may transmit the virus. In another city 100km away, jogging is allowed.
Do you really think the same activity is lethal is one city, and harmless in another?

Yes, its wise to close public gatherings, but a lot of the rules that are being made up is just to satisfy the public
 
Frustrated by social-distancing rules and the economic hardship associated with them, people in some countries haven taked to the streets to protest.

Anti-lockdown protests have been staged in several countries, despite clear scientific advice that social distancing and lockdowns save lives.

The US

Hundreds of protesters gathered for rallies against restrictions in several states, including Colorado, Texas and Maryland, over the weekend. Gathering in close proximity in defiance of social-distancing guidelines, the protesters called on governors to re-open economies shut by coronavirus.

Brazil

A protest against stay-at-home orders issued by state governors was held outside army headquarters in the capital, Brasilia, on Sunday.

A surprise guest was Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who has repeatedly downplayed the threat of the virus. Bolsonaro has clashed in recent weeks with state governors who have imposed lockdowns, denouncing the measures as "dictatorial".

Bolsonaro has expressed scepticism about the threat of Covid-19Image caption: Bolsonaro has expressed scepticism about the threat of Covid-19

Russia

Riot police in southern Russia were deployed on Monday to disperse hundreds of people protesting against coronavirus restrictions.

Demonstrators chanted outside government headquarters in Vladikavkaz, the capital of North Ossetia.

Police have arrested a protest organiser, an opera singer called Vadim Cheldiev, who says he doesn't believe the coronavirus exists.

India

Last week,India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended the country’s nationwide lockdown until at least 3 May, causing anger among migrant workers who have been left jobless by the restrictions.

Hours after the announcement, clashes between migrant workers and police broke out in Mumbai. Thousands of jobless migrant workers then gathered at a railway station, demanding food and transport to their homes.
 
Things are picking back up in my state, I think things will go back to normal in a month or month and a half. Things have to go back to normal, this is getting out of hand and paranoia isn't the solution to dealing with a virus.
 
Slovakia plans to reopen small shops, outdoor sports grounds

Slovakia plans to allow the reopening of small shops of up to 300 square metres, outdoor sports grounds, outdoor market places and restaurants for takeaway meals from Wednesday, Prime Minister Igor Matovic said on Monday, in an easing of its coronavirus lockdown.

The country has some of the strictest lockdown restrictions in Europe, including bans on international passenger travel as well as all public, religious, cultural and sporting events. Schools have been closed as well as most shops and people returning from abroad face a compulsory 14-day state quarantine.

Matovic said the plan was subject to approval by the country’s crisis committee on Tuesday, and any further steps would follow with a two-week delay upon evaluation of the initial relaxation.

Slovakia will join its neighbours Austria and the Czech Republic in relaxing restrictions as these countries believe they are in a position to keep the spread of the virus under control.

Slovakia has had only 13 deaths so far, the smallest per capita number in the European Union, but new cases have not yet been on a downtrend.

“We have courage to open certain shops in a situation when the number of cases is not yet falling. Let’s do it but we need to be even more responsible (than hitherto),” said Matovic.

Matovic said that the country would proceed to the next stage if the daily median of new cases in one week does not exceed 100.

Stage two includes opening short-term boarding houses, hairdressers, taxi services and allowing religious services and weddings to take place with a limited number of participants.

The central European country of 5.5 million was one of the first ones to impose compulsory wearing of face masks in public and this measure will remain in force for the time being.

Slovakia recorded the first case of the new coronavirus on March 6 and has so far registered 1,173 cases as of midnight Sunday while 251 people have recovered from the disease.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ll-shops-outdoor-sports-grounds-idUSKBN2222KJ
 
Austria to reopen bars and restaurants in May

Thousands of Austrian shops reopened last week - albeit with strict rules on social distancing and face masks made mandatory nationwide - as the country eased its lockdown.

Now Chancellor Sebastian Kurz says that if the number of coronavirus infections stays low, restaurants and cafes will be able to re-open from 15 May.

Social distancing rules about the size of groups and the number of guests permitted will be announced next week. It’s expected that serving staff will have to wear masks.

Religious services will also resume, while schools will slowly reopen in a step-by-step process from the start of May.

The chancellor said Austria was moving faster than other countries towards something like a new normality. But he warned that the government was ready to slam on the brakes if infections start to rise again.
 
Czechs will be able to move outside in groups of up to 10, the health ministry says, as the Covid-19 situation has improved. The Czech Republic’s lockdown began on 16 March.

Travel abroad will also be permitted from Monday, though with strict conditions. Czechs will be tested for coronavirus on re-entering the country. EU citizens - not other foreigners - will be allowed in, but must have proof of having tested negative in recent days.

Italy, with one of Europe’s tightest lockdowns, is preparing for “Phase 2” – an easing affecting much more of daily life than the very limited easing that started on 14 April.

So far, some small shops – besides those selling food and medicines – have reopened. Phase 2 means resuming construction and manufacturing and reopening more public transport. Social distancing and mask-wearing will remain in force. Some easing could start as early as Monday.

In Belgium a panel of experts is to set out plans for easing the lockdown, starting on 4 May, with a wider easing on 18 May. Initially DIY stores, bike shops and some other small businesses will reopen. Then on 18 May schools are expected to reopen, along with hairdressers. But leisure facilities, such as gyms and cinemas, will remain shut. The lockdown began on 12 March.

EU leaders have agreed that emergency EU loans of €540bn (£470bn; $580bn) will be released from 1 June to help businesses and workers. Later a special recovery fund worth at least €1 trillion will be set up, though details are yet to be decided.
 
Belgium set for phased easing of lockdown from May 4

Belgium plans to allow a gradual easing of coronavirus restriction measures from May 4, with a series of phases of further re-opening during the course of the month.

Restrictions in the country, among the hardest hit by COVID-19, currently just permit shops selling food, home improvement stores, garden centers and pharmacies to open, with most people only allowed to work from home.

Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes told a news conference after seven hours of discussions on Friday that Belgium could tighten restrictions or delay easing depending on the health situation.

“It is now time to look to the future,” she said. “But COVID has not disappeared, the virus is still with us and it is dangerous for the population. It is absolutely essential that the safety measures are respected during the phase-out period.”

Wilmes said Belgium would need to carry out 25,000-30,000 tests per day to withdraw from lockdown. Tracing of the contacts made by infected people would be carried out by a new team of 2,000 staff.

From May 4, more businesses will be allowed to reopen. People will also be allowed to meet up with two people not living with them as long as they are outside and keep a distance from each other.

Adults and children aged 12 or above will have to wear masks on public transport. To help, shops selling fabric or sewing supplies will reopen.

A week later, all shops will be allowed to reopen, under strict social distancing conditions.

In a further phase from May 18, schools will welcome back some pupils, but classes will be kept to a maximum size of 10. People will be able to host small gatherings at home, visit a museum and go to a hairdresser.

Cafes and restaurants and some tourist attractions will not open before June 8. Trips abroad or of more than one day will also not be allowed before then.

Belgium’s gradual easing of restrictions partly mirrors the actions of its neighbors. The Netherlands expects to reopen elementary schools from May 11. Germany has already allowed smaller shops to open, with schools due to restart from May 4.. In France, the lockdown lasts until May 11.

Belgium has 44,293 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 6,679 fatalities, although more than half of the deaths have occurred in care homes and for 96% of them COVID-19 is only suspected rather than confirmed. Most countries do not include such deaths in their figures.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...d-easing-of-lockdown-from-may-4-idUSKCN2263EJ
 
Maybe the term "business as usual" will need to be redefined going forward.

Will things be the same as they were before? tough question.
 
Italy to start lifting coronavirus lockdown from May 4: Conte

Italy will allow factories and building sites to re-open from May 4 before allowing more businesses to open in following weeks as it prepares a staged end to Europe’s longest coronavirus lockdown, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said on Sunday.

More than two months after the first case of COVID-19 appeared in a small town outside Milan and following weeks of lockdown, Italy is looking ahead to a second phase of the crisis in which it will attempt to restart the economy without triggering a second wave of the disease.

“We expect a very complex challenge,” Conte said as he outlined the roadmap to restarting activities put into hibernation since early March. “We will live with the virus and we will have to adopt every precaution possible.”

Manufacturers, construction companies and some wholesalers will be allowed to re-open from May 4, followed by retailers two weeks later, while restaurants and bars will be allowed to re-open fully from the beginning of June although takeaway business will be possible earlier.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...virus-lockdown-from-may-4-conte-idUSKCN2280QR
 
Making public transport safe next hurdle in easing lockdowns

In cities around the world, public transport systems are the key to getting workers back on the job and restarting devastated economies, yet everything from trains to buses to ferries to bicycles will have to be re-imagined for the coronavirus era.

In hard-hit Italy, Spain, France and Britain, standing cheek-to-jowl with fellow commuters in packed trains or trams was as much a part of the morning routine in pre-coronavirus times as a steaming shot of espresso or a crispy croissant.

That’s going to have to change as authorities try to balance restarting shut-down economies while still clinging to hard-won gains in controlling the spread of the virus.
 
Light at the end of the tunnel?

Italy's not the only country that's slowly easing its lockdown. Others are slowly starting to see light at the end of the tunnel:

In Spain, adults were able to exercise outdoors over the weekend for the first time in seven weeks

France is also set to lift its lockdown next week, on 11 May. Children will return to school in phases and some businesses will reopen

After a six-week state of emergency, Portugal has today begun a three-phase reopening plan

About half of the states in the US have also began easing restrictions

In Asia, Thailand has begun easing its lockdown across certain sectors - some businesses and public parks have been allowed to re-open

In Hong Kong, government workers are returning to work today as the city's lockdown eases. Outdoor facilities, libraries and museums will also reopen

Several states in Australia are also allowing for more outdoor activities and public gatherings - though these rules differ across states
Over in the Middle East, Jordan says it has lifted all restrictions on economic activity, allowing all businesses and industries to resume production. In Tunisia, half of the public administration and industry sectors are returning to work, although face masks must be worn.

Egypt is allowing hotels to reopen for domestic tourists on condition they operate at no more than 25% capacity.

And in Iran, mosques are reopening in many towns and cities where the risk from the virus is considered to be low
 
Germany to reopen all shops, allow soccer matches: sources

Germany’s state premiers will agree on measures to further ease coronavirus restrictions in a teleconference with Chancellor Angela Merkel scheduled for Wednesday, two people familiar with the preparations told Reuters on Monday.

The state premiers are expected to give the green light for large shops to reopen, probably from May 11, the sources said.

Smaller shops are already back to business in Europe’s largest economy as long as they respect social distancing rules to slow the spread of the highly contagious novel coronavirus.

German states are also set to allow the Bundesliga soccer league to resume matches, probably from May 15, under strict conditions without fans in stadiums, the sources said.

At the same time, state premiers will allow outdoor sports for non-professionals and children, the sources added.

The states will also agree to reopen schools for all grades step-by-step, though most children will only be allowed to go to class in rotating shifts, not on daily basis, the sources said.

Officials are also aware that “something needs to be done” to gradually reopen day nurseries and kindergartens for as many toddlers as possible to help working parents, one source said.

Germany took a further step on the long road back to post-coronavirus normality on Monday, with museums and hairdressers reopening under strict conditions, churches opening their doors for worshippers, and more car factories resuming work.

But more than a month after Germany suspended all but essential social and commercial life to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, politicians are at odds over how far and how fast to move.

There is mounting pressure from business groups and some regional governments who are anxious to move faster on restarting economic life. Merkel has warned that reopening too swiftly risks triggering a second wave of infections.

Germany has been more successful than other large European countries in slowing the virus’ spread - it estimates that every 100 carriers of the virus now infects only 74 others on average, well below the 100 mark where new restrictions must be imposed.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ps-allow-soccer-matches-sources-idUSKBN22G2TU
 
Finland to let restaurants, theatres reopen from June 1 as curbs ease

Finland will lift some coronavirus restrictions from June 1, allowing restaurants to reopen gradually and public services including libraries, theatres and sports facilities to start operating again, the government said on Monday.

A ban on public meetings will be relaxed from a maximum of 10 people to 50 people from the same date, but emergency powers will be kept in place, it said.

Essential travel, such as work-related journeys, to countries in Europe’s Schengen open-border area will be allowed from May 14, Interior Minister Maria Ohisalo said.

Professional sports events and competitions will also restart from June 1, under “special arrangements”, including restrictions on the crowd, the government said, without giving further details.

As of Monday, Finland had 240 deaths and 5,327 confirmed coronavirus cases, according to health authorities.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...eopen-from-june-1-as-curbs-ease-idUSKBN22G2AB
 
No 'return to normal', scientists and celebrities say

About 200 scientists and celebrities have signed a letter published in French newspaper Le Monde, saying the world cannot go "back to normal" after the pandemic.

Famous actors including Robert De Niro, Juliette Binoche, Adam Driver and Monica Bellucci put their name on the letter, as well as Nobel Prize winners, economists, philosophers and astrophysicists.

"Adjustments are not enough, the problem is systemic," the letter reads.

Signatories called on leaders to "overhaul objectives, values and savings".
 
The Netherlands will begin a phased easing of its almost two-month-long coronavirus lockdown on Monday, according to a report by the national broadcaster NOS.

The prime minister, Mark Rutte, is set to announce the reopening schedule in a live TV broadcast at 5pm GMT on Wednesday evening, the NOS said, citing anonymous sources.

From next week, elementary schools will reopen, with classes split and rotated to enable greater distancing.

Beauty salons and hairdressers will also be allowed to reopen, and non-contact outdoor sports such as tennis will be permitted, the NOS said.

Public transport will resume normal schedules from 1 June, but with just 40% of seats available to allow for social distancing, and with the wearing of face masks compulsory. High schools will also reopen in June.

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the Netherlands rose by 232 to 41,319 on Wednesday, with 36 new deaths for a total of 5,204, the National Institute for Health said in its daily update.
 
Australia readies to ease some COVID-19 restrictions

Australia’s national Cabinet was on Friday expected to ease some social distancing restrictions as the number of new coronavirus infections slows.

Australia in March imposed strict social distancing restrictions, which coupled with the closure of its borders is widely believed to have drastically slowed the number of new COVID-19 infections.

With fewer than 20 new infections each day, Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison last week said he would meet on Friday with state and territory leaders to decide which restrictions will be eased.

Australia’s Minister for Health Greg Hunt on Thursday said he expected the Cabinet to detail a timetable for easing those restrictions.

“What I expect is a clear roadmap out, with clear stages,” Hunt told reporters in Melbourne.

Although the measures have successfully prevented local hospitals being swamped by coronavirus patients, it has taken a devastating toll on the economy, which is on course for its first recession in 30 years.

Unemployment is expected to top 10% this year and the Reserve Bank of Australia expects GDP to slump 6% during 2020, a decline that Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said is costing the country A$4 billion ($2.60 billion) each week.

Australia has had fewer than 7,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus. Fewer than 800 people are still sick with COVID-19, though 97 people have died from the virus.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ease-some-covid-19-restrictions-idUSKBN22J3HS
 
Norway to reopen high schools, bars and most of society by mid-June

Norway aims to reopen by mid-June most of the public and private institutions that have been closed to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, Prime Minister Erna Solberg said on Thursday.

The Nordic country was one of the first in Europe to curb activities to rein in the spread of the novel coronavirus, on March 12, and to relax some restrictions once it got the outbreak under control, in late April.

“Thanks to our common efforts since March, we have brought the contamination under control,” Solberg told a news conference. “We can therefore, over time, lighten the toughest measures.”

Norway, like many other European countries, is trying to negotiate a path between the need for reopening society while at the same time avoiding a flare-up in new contaminations.

Kindergartens reopened on April 20, primary schools from first to fourth grade on April 27, but middle schools and high schools have remained closed. They will now resume from Monday.

The government also aims to allow the Norwegian football league to resume on June 16 and planned events with up to 200 participants one day earlier.

Bars and amusement parks could reopen on June 1, while private gatherings of 20 people, rather than five, will be allowed on Thursday.

“We are now in a control phase (of the outbreak),” said Solberg.

TRAVELLING

A person carrying the novel coronavirus in Norway contaminates now on average 0.49 other individuals, compared with 0.7 as of April 6, according to the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. The government’s goal had been to limit the spread to maximum one other person.

Some 7,995 people have tested positive for COVID-19 as of Thursday, up 37 on the previous day. Some 209 people have died of the disease so far.

Foreigners without the right to live or work in the country - tourists, for instance - are still not allowed to enter the country.

But foreigners working in sectors considered crucial, such as agriculture, fisheries or the oil industry, can come in the country though they still have to submit to a 14-day quarantine.

Still, if Norwegians and foreign residents want to go abroad, they will need to undergo a home quarantine upon their return.

Solberg said that this was the main unknown as it was difficult to plan for lifting the quarantine rule as it depended on how other countries managed their own outbreaks.

“We do not have the answer on this yet,” she said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...and-most-of-society-by-mid-june-idUSKBN22J2O4
 
Australia will ease social-distancing restrictions implemented to slow the spread of the coronavirus in a three-step process, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday, with the aim of removing all curbs by July.

Australia imposed strict social-distancing restrictions and closed its borders in March in decisions that are credited with drastically slowing the number of new infections of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

With fewer than 20 new cases being recorded each day, Morrison said Australian states and territories on Friday agreed to a road map to remove most of the curbs.

"You can stay under the doona forever. You'll never face any danger," Morrison told reporters in Canberra, using an Australian word for a duvet. "But we've got to get out from under the doona at some time."

Morrison said it will be up to Australia's various states and territories to decide when to begin implement each stage. Each step is expected to be separated by a four-week transition.


Calls in Australia for COVID-19 distancing measures to be lifted (2:19)
Despite the staggered easing, Morrison warned the country should still expect further outbreaks.

Australia has had fewer than 7,000 confirmed cases of COVD-19 and fewer than 800 people are still sick with the disease. Almost 100 people have died.

'Baby steps'
Under the first stage of the plan, restaurants and cafes currently limited to takeaway services will be allowed to reopen, but with a maximum of 10 customers at any one time.

"Step 1 is tentative, baby steps into normalisation," Australia's Chief Medical Officer Dr Brendan Murphy told the briefing.

If no major outbreaks are recorded states and territories will move to stage two where gyms, cinemas and galleries will be allowed to re-open, albeit with only 20 customers at a time.

At this point, states that have closed their borders would start to allow some interstate travel, Morrison said.

When implemented, stage three will permit gatherings of up to 100 people, allow employees to return to their offices and see the re-opening of nightclubs.

Australia
Social distancing measures introduced in March have left Australia's sports grounds and tennis courts empty [Dan Peled/EPA]
All interstate travel will be allowed, along with some limited international travel, including flights between Australia and New Zealand.

International students would also potentially be allowed to return to Australia, but would face two weeks in quarantine.

Jobs lost
While the lockdown measures have successfully prevented local hospitals from being swamped by coronavirus patients, they have taken a devastating toll on the economy.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg estimated the lockdown is costing the country 4 billion Australian dollars ($2.6 billion) a week.

Australia's central bank on Friday predicted the country is facing its biggest economic contraction on record, even with government and central bank support pledges totalling 320 billion Australian dollars ($203 billion) to cushion the economic blow.

Despite the government subsidising the wages of about six million Australians - a move that keeps them out of unemployment statistics - about 10 percent of the country's labour force is also expected to be without a job this year.

Morrison, however, said once the three-stage process is implemented, his government expects about 850,000 people will return to work.
 
Dutch schools, cafes and museums to reopen in June

The Netherlands will press ahead with a further easing of lockdown measures in June due to a steadily declining number of coronavirus infections and hospital admissions, Prime Minister Mark Rutte said on Tuesday.

High schools will reopen on June 2 and elementary schools will return to full schedules on June 8, Rutte said, detailing a decision by the Dutch government.

The easing will take place nearly two and a half months after lockdown measures were imposed across the country of 17 million in mid-March.

“We earned the space we are getting for sticking to the guidelines,” Rutte said in a live television broadcast. “We have to stick to the rules because we know the virus can flare up again.”

The number of infections from the novel coronavirus rose by 108 to 44,249 on Tuesday, with 21 new deaths over the last 24 hours. The death toll stood at 5,715, national health authorities said.

Cafes and restaurants will be permitted to open on June 1, with a maximum of 30 guests, Rutte said. People must keep 1.5 metres apart from others, unless they live together. Museums will also reopen, but tickets will only be sold online in advance to avoid crowds.

Homes for the elderly, where infection rates have been relatively high, will again allow visitors, with more widespread testing available to reduce risks.

Public transport will also resume regular schedules, with non-medical face masks compulsory for anyone over 13 years of age. Only essential travel will be allowed and less than half of seats will be available.

Gyms and dance venues will remain closed and large sporting events banned, probably until Sept. 1.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...-museums-to-reopen-in-june-idUKKBN22V2QU?il=0
 
ROME (AP) — As nations around the world loosen coronavirus restrictions, people are discovering that the return to normal is anything but.

Schools, offices, public transportation, bars and restaurants are now on the front lines of post-lockdown life — back in business, in many cases, but not business as usual.

How each of those key sectors manages social distancing and tamps down expected new outbreaks will determine the shape of daily life for millions as researchers race to develop a vaccine that is still probably months, if not years, away from being available to all.

What a return to normal looks like varies widely. For hungry migrant workers in India, it was finally being able to catch trains back to their home villages to farm while city jobs dried up. For hundreds of cruise ship workers stranded at sea for months, it was finally reaching shore Wednesday in Croatia. For wealthy shoppers, it was returning to the newly reopened boutiques of America’s Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, California.

In Britain, the leader of the House of Commons said members of Parliament should return to London to work in person on June 2 after weeks of remote working. Jacob Rees-Mogg said the decision recognizes “the need for business to continue.” Authorities are likely to limit the number of people allowed into the small chamber, where lawmakers sit shoulder to shoulder on long benches.

In Italy, where good food is an essential part of life, once-packed restaurants and cafes are facing a huge financial hit as they reopen with strict social distancing rules. The losses are forecast to pile up to 30 billion euros ($32 billion) this year.

“We have to turn upside down all the activity that we did before,” lamented chef Raffaele di Cristo, who now must wear a mask and latex gloves as he prepares food at the popular Corsi Trattoria in Rome. “Everything is changed. Slowly, slowly, we will try to understand and to adapt to this coronavirus.”

Full Coverage: Virus Outbreak
Corsi reopened for business Monday with half its tables removed to ensure the mandated 1-meter (3-foot) spacing between tables. Hand sanitizing gel was placed at the entrance, and a new ordering system was installed so customers could read the menu on their phones.

Some shops in Italy have complained about a shortage of gloves keeping away customers. Veneto Gov. Luca Zaia said Wednesday he would change the rules on wearing gloves in clothing stores and shoe shops and substitute sanitizing gel instead.

Slovakia reopened theaters, cinemas and shopping malls on Wednesday, all with new restrictions on visitor numbers, even though it has had only 28 deaths from COVID-19.

The head of the Dutch hospitality industry welcomed a decision to allow bars and restaurants to reopen on June 1 but warned about the impact of mandatory social distancing rules.

“The restrictions are unfortunately unworkable” for many businesses, said Rober Willemsen of Royal Hospitality Netherlands, adding that more government support is needed to ensure the survival of many bars and restaurants.

Education is also facing a radical rethink.

Cambridge became the first university in Britain to cancel all face-to-face lectures for the upcoming school year, saying they will be held virtually and streamed online until summer 2021. Other institutions have taken different tacks. The University of Notre Dame in Indiana will bring students back to campus but redesigned its calendar to start the semester early in August and end before Thanksgiving, along with ordering masks, testing and contact tracing.

In South Korea, hundreds of thousands of high school seniors had their temperatures checked and used hand sanitizers as they returned Wednesday, many for the first time since late last year. Students and teachers were required wear masks, and some schools installed plastic partitions around desks.

France is limiting spaces in its primary schools, giving priority to the children of essential workers and those in need. Some younger students even go on alternating days, while high schools remain closed.

In the new normal, people’s gratitude at being able to shop or eat out again is mingling with worries about job security.

Business was slow Wednesday at a Paris farmer’s market with a mixed mood among the masked, gloved vendors. A man selling peonies and petunias said he was glad to get out and see shoppers again, while a woman selling asparagus and tomatoes behind a makeshift plastic screen grumbled that her customers were buying less than usual.

Aircraft engine maker Rolls-Royce announced plans Wednesday to cut 9,000 workers as it grapples with the collapse in air travel. In general, those jobs come with good pay and benefits, and losing them is a sharp blow to local communities.

Some businesses are adapting quickly to new realities. In Kenya, safari operators have resorted to sharing live broadcasts on social media in hopes that attention to endangered and other species doesn’t fade.

Many governments, including those in scores of U.S. states, are in fierce disagreement over what the new normal should even be.

As beaches reopened in Barcelona, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez asked lawmakers to back a plan to extend the nation’s state of emergency by another two weeks until June 7. Spain’s main opposition, the conservative Popular Party, rejected the move.

“You are like a headless chicken running around not knowing what to do,” Popular Party leader Pablo Casado told Sánchez. “To endorse your extension would be irresponsible.”

While infection rates have been falling in Asia and much of Europe, the pandemic is still spiking in Latin America. Brazil this week became the world’s third worst-hit country with more than 250,000 confirmed cases despite limited testing. In Lima, the capital of Peru, coronavirus patients are filling up the city’s intensive care beds.

“We’re in bad shape,” said Pilar Mazzetti, head of the Peruvian government’s COVID-19 task force. “This is war.”

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned that the pandemic could push millions into extreme poverty in Africa, where the virus has reached every country. Guterres said Africa needs more than $200 billion and “an across-the-board debt standstill” for struggling nations.

More than 4.9 million people worldwide have been confirmed infected by the virus, and over 320,000 deaths have been recorded, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University that experts believe is too low for reasons that differ country by country. The United States has seen about 92,000 deaths and Europe has had around 165,000.

Russia and Brazil are now behind only the United States in the number of reported infections, and cases are also spiking in India, South Africa and Mexico. Russia announced Wednesday that its coronavirus caseload has surpassed 300,000, with the death toll reaching almost 3,000.

https://apnews.com/6303d40722e4254611cf35fa8b7b2426
 
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