Vienna eases lockdown one month after Kent variant arrival

Austria Launches Easter Shutdown
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A mayor is expecting to relax Vienna’s coronavirus lockdown a month after it was introduced.

The left-wing mayor hit out at the conservative ruling party’s plans for a broad easing of restrictions nationally next month.

Austria has had three national lockdowns, the last of which eased in February. Vienna, however, reintroduced a full lockdown on April 1 to help hospitals facing rising cases, particularly of the more dangerous so-called Kent variant.

Infections nationally have eased this month but remain stubbornly high at more than 1,500 a day. In comparison there were 263 positive tests in London yesterday.

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People walk across Stephansplatz square in Vienna, Austria
APA/AFP via Getty Images

Despite that, Chancellor Sebastian Kurz last week said restaurants, hotels and theatres will reopen nationally on May 19, though provinces can have stricter rules locally if needed.

“The situation is improving but must still be taken very seriously,” Vienna Mayor Michael Ludwig of the Social Democrats told a news conference announcing that non-essential shops would reopen on Monday, May 3.

The opposition Social Democrats have increasingly criticised what they say are hasty loosening steps by Kurz’s ruling coalition with the Greens.

Kurz’s conservatives still have a commanding lead in opinion polls but recent surveys show their support eroding.

“Regarding May 19 and the government’s announcement that a lot will be opened at the same time, personally I believe one should act very carefully here,” Ludwig said.

Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Vienna
A person passes closed restaurants after the local government extended the lockdown due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Vienna
REUTERS

“I think such a general opening is very difficult and here I agree with the vast majority of experts,” he said, adding that nobody can give a reliable forecast for the situation more than 10 days ahead.

Kurz has said easing restrictions will drive up infections but vaccinating risk groups should limit hospitalisations, and other factors like jobs are also important.

“With all sympathy for the economic challenges, for example, people’s health will always come first for me,” Ludwig said.

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