Spain to re-open for tourists
after lockdown
Patrons sit on the terrace of a beach bar in Barcelona as Covid-19 restrictions are eased in parts of Spain |
Several European nations, including Spain, are slowly easing
lockdowns linked to the coronavirus pandemic. Tourists will be able to visit
Spain from the beginning of July without having to quarantine for two weeks.
By Stefan J. Bos
While still mourning its reported 28,000 coronavirus deaths,
Spain wants to reopen to the outside world. The world's second-most visited
nation currently demands all foreign visitors isolate themselves for 14 days on
arrival.
But in a significant turnaround, the government of the
world's second-most visited country decided to lift the controls from July 1.
It is an attempt to revive its tourist industry for the
holiday season. Prime Minister Petro Sánchez said he wants Spain to establish
reciprocal "safe corridors" with other countries in Europe. "I
am announcing that there will be a tourist season this summer. We want to
guarantee the reactivation of national tourism for this summer season,"
Sánchez told his nation.
In televised remarks, he added: "I publicly invite all
tourist establishments, bars, restaurants, beach destinations to start to
prepare from today and to restart their activities in a few days. I am
announcing that from July, foreign visits to Spain will resume under safety
conditions."
And his foreign minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya proposed
that Spain and other European Union member states should agree to a
common approach to open borders. She wants a European definition of which
countries should be deemed as safe.
Tourism industry
Saving the tourism industry and commerce is also crucial for
other European nations struggling to overcome the economic impact of the
pandemic. Among them is Europe's largest economy Germany, which has entered
into a technical recession. Official figures show that the German economy shrank
by 2.2 percent in the first quarter of the year. That is compared to the same
period in 2019 amid a global downturn linked to the coronavirus pandemic.
Despite the financial difficulties, the government agreed to
a rescue deal worth 9 billion euros to save Germany's crucial airliner
Lufthansa from collapse after many flights were canceled due to the coronavirus
crisis.
There was also some good news in Europe for beer-loving
Czechs. They can finally get back into pubs, but with social distancing and mask-wearing
indoors. Perhaps no surprise as the Czech Republic is the country with the
highest per capita beer consumption in the world.
Elsewhere in central and Eastern Europe, Hungary is talking
with neighboring nations to ease border controls.
But as summer approaches in the European continent, some
government leaders are under pressure for violating their own coronavirus
restriction rules. In Austria, President Alexander Van der Bellen has
apologized after staying at an Italian restaurant with friends beyond the
coronavirus-related closing time of 2300.
And in Britain, prime minister Boris Johnson is under
pressure to fire his chief aid for allegedly violating the national lockdown
rules that he helped to create. Dominic Cummings drove the length of England to
his parents' house while being infected with the coronavirus.
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