France and other governments
pressured over coronavirus response
Outgoing French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe (Left), with newly appointed Prime Minister Jean Castex during a handover ceremony on 3 July (ANSA) |
A French court has launched an inquiry into the alleged
mishandling by the outgoing French government of the coronavirus pandemic. The
announcement comes while elsewhere in Europe, and the former Soviet Union,
tensions also rise over the way leaders deal with the crisis.
By Stefan J. Bos
The French court investigation focuses on three senior
officials, including outgoing Prime Minister Edouard Philippe. It follows
complaints from unions and doctors about shortages of medical equipment during
the coronavirus pandemic. Authorities say nearly 30,000 people died in France
of the coronavirus disease Covid-19.
The Law Court of the Republic also looks into possible
misconduct by Agnès Buzyn, the former health minister, and her successor
Olivier Véran.
The announcement came after France's new Prime Minister Jean
Castex warned that the "economic crisis of the pandemic is already
here." Speaking outside his official residence, he added: "Priorities
will, therefore, have to evolve, ways of working will have to be adapted. We
will have to unite the nation to fight this crisis that is setting in."
Castex also said he would continue the structural reforms
undertaken by Philippe, who stepped down on Friday under pressure
from the president. Elsewhere in Europe, government leaders and other officials
also struggle to deal with the pandemic impact.
In Spain, the government of the Catalonia region re-imposed
coronavirus controls on an area of 210,000 people after a sharp rise in
infections. President Quim Torra said no-one would be allowed to enter or
leave Segrià, an agricultural area west of Barcelona, which includes the city
of Lleida.
More tensions
Tensions are also rising between EU nations. Portugal's
foreign affairs minister, for instance, has said his country's exclusion
from a list of nations for which quarantine will not apply for people returning
to England is "absurd."
Critics cite examples that even British officials or their
family members violate rules. In the latest such case, the father of British
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has defended his decision to fly to Greece via
Bulgaria.
He wanted to "COVID-proof" his property there
before he potentially rents it out. However, commentaries said that violated —
at the very least — the spirit of Greece's coronavirus restrictions as well as
the current travel guidance in Britain.
All is also not well outside Western Europe, in the former
Soviet Union: In Russia, a Russian Orthodox Church court has expelled a
coronavirus-denying cleric from the priesthood after he seized control of a
convent.
And in Armenia, police showed up at the offices of two
independent television stations critical of the government to check into their
alleged violation of infection-prevention rules during the coronavirus
pandemic - move the media outlets denounced as political pressure by the prime
minister.
The developments underscore broader concerns that the
negative impact of the coronavirus pandemic on policies and economies in
Europe, and beyond, is far from over.
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