Conte Notes Risk as Italy Prepares for Lockdown Easing

Conte Notes Risk as Italy Prepares for Lockdown Easing
Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte holds a press conference in Rome on May 16, 2020. Pool photo via AP
Reuters
Updated:

ROME/MILAN—Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte acknowledges a “calculated risk” as he outlined a further loosening of movement restrictions on May 16, including opening borders to travelers from Europe from next month to unwind one of the world’s most rigid coronavirus lockdowns.

With shops as well as bars and restaurants due to reopen as of May 18, the government has also announced that people will no longer have to justify travel within their own region and will be able to meet friends as well as family.

“People will be able to go wherever they want—to a shop, to the mountains, to a lake or the seaside,” he said.

The announcements came as the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus deaths in Italy fell to 153 on May 16, the lowest since March 9.

A ban on travel between regions and abroad will remain in place until after Italy’s June 2 Republic Day holiday, preventing any mass travel over that long holiday weekend.

But all travel curbs will be lifted from June 3 and travelers from European Union countries will be able to enter without going into quarantine, offering some hope ahead of the summer to the vital tourism sector.

Conte said the decision to lift curbs is a “calculated risk,” but added, “We’re facing this risk and we have to accept it because otherwise, we will never get started again.”

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte wears a face mask as he attends a session of the lower house of parliament on the CCP virus in Rome, Italy on April 21, 2020. (Remo Casilli/Reuters)
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte wears a face mask as he attends a session of the lower house of parliament on the CCP virus in Rome, Italy on April 21, 2020. Remo Casilli/Reuters

Recession

Italy has had some 31,800 COVID-19 deaths since the disease first emerged in the northern region of Lombardy on Feb. 21, the highest total outside of China after the United States and Britain.

In a bid to contain the contagion, Italy was the first European country to impose nationwide restrictions in March, not sanctioning an initial relaxation of the rules until May 4, when it allowed factories and parks to reopen.

The changes announced by Conte take the process further. While large public gatherings will still be banned, church and other religious services can resume and museums and galleries will also be able to open.

Gyms, swimming pools and sports centers will reopen on May 25, while theaters and cinemas can reopen beginning June 15.

A man wearing a face mask walks past billboards of La Rinascente department store, which is due to reopen with social distancing measures applied, after it was closed due to the spread of the CCP virus in Milan, Italy, on May 16, 2020. (Alessandro Garofalo/Reuters)
A man wearing a face mask walks past billboards of La Rinascente department store, which is due to reopen with social distancing measures applied, after it was closed due to the spread of the CCP virus in Milan, Italy, on May 16, 2020. Alessandro Garofalo/Reuters

With its economy facing severe recession and public debt expected to spiral to more than 150 percent of its annual economic output, the government has been desperate to get the country back to work without triggering a second wave in the epidemic.

Some regions had pushed for a swifter rollback, but Conte has insisted on a gradual return to normal. However, regions will have scope to decide individual measures as long as safety measures are respected.

People in quarantine or who exhibit COVID-19 symptoms will have to remain in isolation and social distancing rules will continue to apply; people also are still advised to wear masks inside or on crowded streets.

By Angelo Amante and Giulio Piovaccari
Epoch Times staff contributed to this report