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Explosion at Dutch test center, Slovakia's night-time curfew: COVID-19 daily bulletin
Updated 02:51, 04-Mar-2021
Aden-Jay Wood
Europe;

TOP HEADLINES

- An explosion hit a virus testing center in the Dutch town of Bovenkarspel, north of the capital Amsterdam on Wednesday morning. The explosive that broke windows but caused no injuries, "must have been placed" there, a police spokesman has said. Protesters have recently taken to the streets across the Netherlands to march against the restrictions currently in place, with some of the protests leading to clashes between police and members of the public.

- Austria is to be given a further 100,000 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech jab from the European Union to inoculate all adults in the Schwaz district of the province of Tyrol. It's in response to a surge in new infections of the variant first discovered in South Africa, according to Chancellor Sebastian Kurz.

- A UK study has found that one dose of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or the Oxford University-AstraZeneca vaccine helps to prevent severe disease in people aged over 80. The findings from the University of Bristol found the Pfizer jab was 71.4 percent effective at preventing symptomatic illness severe enough to result in hospitalization, while the AstraZeneca shot was 80.4 percent effective.

- Slovakia has imposed a nationwide night-time curfew amid a rise in infections. The restriction bans people from leaving their homes between 8 p.m. and 5 a.m. and will be in place until at least March 19.

- Germany has told the European Union it will keep its border controls aimed at slowing the spread of the virus in place, despite a warning from the EU that it would stop freedom of movement within the bloc.

- France could begin easing its restrictions from mid-April, government spokesperson Gabriel Attal has said. "We will still face hard times, it is true, but for the first time in months, the return to more normal living conditions is in sight," he added.

- The variant of the virus first discovered in Brazil has been detected in Denmark for the first time, Health Minister Magnus Heunicke said.

- Thousands of people have disregarded lockdown restrictions in Zagreb, Croatia to attend the funeral of the city's former long-time mayor Milan Bandic, who passed away last week. Under current regulations, public gatherings should consist of no more than 25 people. 

- Italy's government has tightened measures in regions hardest hit by the virus amid a surge in infections. Schools in 'red zones' are to be closed, while curbs already in place on movement and businesses have been extended until after Easter.

- Thousands of hospital workers in Hungary have quit after refusing to sign new state contracts because they did not agree with some of the terms offered, such as the law restricting extra pay on top of their normal salary.

- More than 168 million children across the world have had their schools completely shut for almost a year due to virus restrictions, according to children's charity UNICEF, while one in seven children has missed more than 75 percent of their in-person learning.

 

00:20

 

ACROSS EUROPE

Stefan de Vries in Amsterdam

On Wednesday morning, an explosive device went off at a COVID-19 test site in Bovenkarspel. Five windows were destroyed but no one was injured. Police are continuing to investigate the area. 

The region's mayor Ronald Wortelboer has condemned the blast. "It's all right to have dissenting opinion but violence is never a way to voice your opinion," he said. 

The protests against the government's restrictions are increasing, yet this explosion comes after some measures have been loosened. As of Wednesday, shops and contact professions such as barbers can reopen again but only to customers who have made an appointment at least four hours in advance.

On Tuesday, there were more than 3,826 new cases in the Netherlands, fewer than the weekly average of 4,545. Yet, the weekly figures from the health authority RIVM showed the decline that started in recent weeks has ended. The institute spoke of a "third wave" and fears the number of infections will increase in the following weeks.

 

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Julia Chapman in Budapest

Some 5,500 Hungarian health workers have quit after refusing to sign new contracts, which change their wages and working conditions. A law setting out the new terms was adopted by parliament in October, criminalizing bribes to doctors and including a salary increase. 

Many healthcare workers, however, objected to the law restricting overtime pay, which they say could leave them worse off. It comes as Hungary's COVID-19 cases have been rising amid a third wave of infections. Officials say 95 percent of the country's medical workers have signed the new contracts and said the standard of care would not be affected by the walkouts.

 

Thousands of people disregarded lockdown restrictions in Zagreb, Croatia on Wednesday to attend the funeral of the city's former long-time mayor Milan Bandic. /AP

Thousands of people disregarded lockdown restrictions in Zagreb, Croatia on Wednesday to attend the funeral of the city's former long-time mayor Milan Bandic. /AP

 

Ross Cullen in Paris

On Wednesday, France's President Emmanuel Macron is chairing the latest meeting of the special health defense council with the prime minister and senior cabinet ministers. 

They are expected to decide whether to impose weekend lockdowns in more regions of the country. The northern port of Dunkirk and the southern city of Nice are already under the Saturday-Sunday confinement measure. 

There are 20 regions under "increased surveillance," including Paris and a weekend lockdown decision is expected to be taken today and could be announced tomorrow at the prime minister's weekly COVID-19 news conference. 

The first evacuations are going to start of COVID-19 patients to the French mainland from saturated hospitals on the island of Reunion. The French Indian Ocean territory will also impose a 6 p.m. curfew starting from March 5.

 

Toni Waterman in Brussels

The Oxford University-AstraZeneca vaccine can now be used in people aged over 55, in what the Belgian Federal Health Minister called a "game-changer." 

Last month, the Superior Health Council said the jab shouldn't be used in older age groups due to a lack of evidence on its efficacy. The council has now reversed course, citing studies in the UK and Israel that show the vaccine significantly reduces hospitalizations in older people. Belgian health experts also said that when necessary, the gap between the first and second Pfizer-BioNTech shot can be extended to 35 days. 

The changes come amid a vaccine shortfall in the country, which has left vaccination centers administering a fraction of their daily capacity. Just 5.54 percent of the population aged 18 and older has received the first dose of a vaccine. 

 

02:15

 

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