Slovakia's jab plea, Portugal targets herd immunity: COVID-19 bulletin

Aden-Jay Wood

text

TOP HEADLINES

  • UK travel companies have recorded a sharp rise in holiday bookings since the government announced England's roadmap out of lockdown on Monday. Online firm Thomas Cook said traffic was up 75 percent, while the country's largest tour operator Tui has recorded a six-fold increase in bookings.

  • France's Labor Minister Elisabeth Borne has said it's important that companies urge their employees to work from home in a bid to prevent another nationwide lockdown amid a surge in infections.

  • The Italian government has extended a ban on non-essential travel between the country's 20 regions until at least March 27 .The measure was due to expire on March 5, but Prime Minister Mario Draghi and his cabinet have since approved a decree to continue the restrictions.

  • Germany's Europe Minister Michael Roth has defended the country's border restrictions with neighbors Czechia and Austria as it seeks to stem the spread of the virus. "These measures obviously put a massive strain on border regions, commuters and the transport of goods and the single market, but the protection of our citizens is paramount," he said.

  • Portugal is aiming to inoculate 70 percent of its population by the end of the summer , Health Minister Marta Temido said. While vaccine program coordinatorHenrique Gouveia e Melosaid herd immunity "should be achieved in August or early September" if the projected vaccine stocks are correct.

  • The largest hospitality group in the Netherlands has said it will sue the government over its ongoing restrictions that have forced bars, cafes and restaurants to shut since mid-October. "The situation is hopeless and time and again, entrepreneurs in the food and catering industry are being deprived of perspective,"Robert Willemsen, chairman of theRoyal Horeca Netherlands hospitalitygroup, said.

  • Slovakia's Foreign MinisterIvan Korcok has called on its EU partners to send vaccine shipments to help the country through what he describes as a "tragic" situation . "I fully realize that other countries have a vaccine shortage as well but Slovakia now, also based on the fact that we have the highest death rate, at the moment needs it most," he added.

  • Europe's drug regulator, the European Medicines Agency has said it's evaluating the use of the antibody treatment remdesivir in virus patients who do not need oxygen support , after its developer Gilead Sciences submitted an application to extend its use.

  • The first batch of the AstraZeneca jab arrived in Ukraine, according to Kyiv's Boryspil airport press service . Health Minister Maksym Stepanov said the batch amounted to 500,000 doses, the first shots received by the country.

READ MORE

Lyon's controversial meat-free lunches

Irish pub treats injured animals

Franzi the singing cleaner robot

The Italian government has extended a ban on non-essential travel between the country's 20 regions until at least March 27. /AP

ACROSS EUROPE

Toni Waterman in Brussels

Belgium's prime minister is trying to manage expectations ahead of Friday's meeting on COVID-19 restrictions. While many are hoping the government will announce an easing of measures, Alexander De Croo has warned that the current figures aren't currently low enough to warrant any sort of major relaxation. Instead, he said Belgians should set their sights on the beginning of May.

Biostatisticians laid out four different scenarios during a press conference on Monday afternoon, each showing that more transmissible mutant strains will lead to a third wave of infections. Experts said the size of that wave will be determined by when restrictions are eased. Pushing it back to late spring would give the government more time to vaccinate people. Right now, just 3.6 percent of the population has received their first dose of a vaccine.

Ross Cullen in Paris

A lockdown is being brought in for the next two weekends in the Alpes-Maritimes region due to the area's exploding infection rate. Shops bigger than 5,000 square meters in area have to close from today in the region. Alpes-Maritimes includes the beach city of Nice and its mayor said "decisions have not been easy to take" but "we have to act."

The infection rate in Dunkirk is 900 per 100,000 people, four times the national average and the mayor of the northern port town has called for an urgent meeting with the government to discuss the situation. One of the members of France's Scientific Council, which advises the government on the pandemic, said "it is possible that the Alpes-Maritimes model could be reproduced elsewhere."

In addition, 11 players from the France men's national rugby team have tested positive for COVID-19 and are isolating. A decision will be made on Wednesday whether to go ahead with the scheduled match in Paris against Scotland this February 28.

01:50

Trent Murray in Frankfurt

The latest data from Germany's Robert Koch Institute show there have been 3,883 new COVID-19 cases recorded. That means the national rate remains relatively stable – neither a major decline nor an increase.

Chancellor Angela Merkel will meet with state premiers next week to decide next steps in the national lockdown. The measures are due to expire on March 7, but she has long maintained that restrictions can only be lifted when there is a big drop in new cases.

The return of warmer weather also has health experts concerned, as more people venture outside to enjoy the sunshine, there's a worry the circulation of the virus could increase as people congregate outdoors.

Julia Chapman in Budapest

Hungary's parliament has voted to extend the country's state of emergency for a further 90 days.

All opposition members of the National Assembly voted against the movement but were outnumbered by the two-thirds majority of the ruling Fidesz Party.

The government argued the emergency powers were necessary to continue combating COVID-19 as a third wave of the pandemic continues in the country.

Opposition parties supported the last extension in November, but on Monday argued the government had abused its previous mandate, which effectively allows Prime Minister Viktor Orban to rule by decree.

A proposed amendment to allow choice between coronavirus vaccines did not pass.

France's labor minister Elisabeth Borne has urged companies to allow their employees to work from home in a bid to prevent another nationwide lockdown. /AP

FROM OUR GLOBAL COLLEAGUES

CGTN Europe:

The Answers Project – Will soldiers become obsolete?

**CGTN China: **

Macao lifts quarantine measures for people from Chinese mainland

**CGTN America: **

Pop-up performances to revitalize arts amid the COVID-19 pandemic

**CGTN Africa: **

Senegal to vaccinate those who wish to receive COVID-19 jabs by 2022

Sign up

here

to get the COVID-19 Europe bulletin sent directly to your inbox.

CGTN Europe has been providing in-depth coverage of the novel coronavirus story as it has unfolded.

Here

you can read the essential information about the crisis.