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COVID-19

How Switzerland’s new clampdown on virus has stoked communal tensions

Switzerland announced Friday that all shops, bars and restaurants must close from 7:00 pm in order to fight a resurgent coronavirus that is now stirring political and cultural tensions.

How Switzerland's new clampdown on virus has stoked communal tensions
AFP

The Alpine country, which will apply the new rules from Saturday until January 22, has some of the worst per capita infection rates in Europe and the government fears the situation could spin out of control over Christmas.

“We're witnessing an exponential increase,” President Simonetta Sommaruga told a press conference in the capital Bern. “Our hospitals and our health workers are being stretched to the limit.”

In March, during the first wave of infections, Switzerland was not hit as hard by Covid-19 deaths and did not impose as strict a lockdown as some other European states.

It eased off those measures in stages, and many praised the Swiss handling of the crisis, with the emphasis placed on individual responsibility.

But relations among Switzerland's linguistic groups have frayed and government responses have come under fire since a new wave hit in the last three months.

READ MORE: Why are Switzerland's French-speaking cantons rebelling against Covid-19 restrictions?

 

Swiss President Simonetta Sommaruga (L) and Swiss Interior and Health Minister Alain Berset wear disposable protective face masks at a press conference on Friday. AFP.

“Initially, it was a health crisis,” Pierre Ruetschi, head of the Swiss Press Club, wrote in the Tribune de Geneve newspaper. “Very quickly it became economic. That's normal. Now, it is also cultural, linguistic, political.”

From just three new cases recorded on June 1, infections rose slowly but steadily before rocketing in October, when cases, hospitalisations and deaths began doubling from week to week.

'Real chaos'

The second wave initially hit the French-speaking west and the Italian-speaking south hardest.

With the government having handed the reins to the regional authorities, those cantons imposed measures to control the virus.

The virus burden then shifted towards the German-speaking majority — and cantons which were in no rush to act despite the government's repeated pleadings.

Many in the Francophone cantons, which were beginning to loosen their restrictions, feel they are now paying the price for a lack of action in the German-speaking areas.

With its stepping out and stepping in approach, “the Federal Council has created real chaos,” Marco Chiesa, leader of the right-wing populist Swiss People's Party — the biggest in the lower house of parliament — told public broadcaster RTS.

With a population of 8.6 million, Switzerland is logging around 5,000 new cases and 100 deaths a day — a base level Health Minister Alain Berset said was far too high to start from if infections begin to double again.

Even so, the new measures are not as strict as in other European countries.

Those regions which have the virus more under control can extend the closing time until 11:00pm, conditions permitting.

All regions can extend it until 1:00am on the nights of December 24 and 31.

Some 372,329 people have tested positive for Covid-19 in Switzerland, while 5,378 have died since the first outbreak.

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COVID-19

What does the increase in the number of Covid cases in Switzerland mean?

Coronavirus infections are on the rise again, with Swiss health officials and epidemiologists expressing concern over the possible evolution of the disease.

What does the increase in the number of Covid cases in Switzerland mean?

While the worst of the Covid pandemic is long over, and experts don’t expect it to re-emerge with the same strength and health consequences as it had in 2020, new cases have been reported in the past weeks.

Wastewater analysis, one of the means employed by health officials to measure the presence of coronavirus, indicates a viral load that is at least five times higher than usual, with values “now almost as high as in some previous Omicron-related waves,” Christoph Ort, spokesperson for Eawag Institute, which traces Covid viruses in 14 wastewater treatment plants in Switzerland, told the media.

What does this mean?

According to Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH), the most common sub-variant in Switzerland right now is the highly transmissible XBB, also known as ‘Kraken.’

The Eris and Pirola variants, which circulated in the summer and early fall are also still present.

While none is nearly as dangerous (at least for most people) as the early Alpha and Delta viruses, which claimed hundreds of thousands of lives in the early stages of the pandemic, there is a reason for concern nevertheless.

“It’s a start of a small wave,” said Rudolf Hauri, head of the Cantonal Doctors’ Association.

“More people are being admitted to hospitals again with, or because of, coronavirus. There are also new cases in intensive care units, but these are generally people with a medical history.”

Should you be worried?
 
While the number of people with serious Covid-related complications is not expected to be as high as previously, the rise in the number of infections should not be trivialised either, infectious disease specialists say.
 
This is especially important for people in the high-risk category — those over 65 or suffering from chronic illnesses — who can get quite sick if infected with the new variants, according to FOPH.
 
This is all the more important as the flu season is about to begin in Switzerland as well, and the confluence of both illnesses, plus other respiratory viruses that typically circulate during the winter, can be very risky.
 
What can you do to protect yourself?
 
Other than adopting the same protective measures as those during the pandemic — that is, washing hands, avoiding close contacts and crowded spaces, and wearing masks where needed — health officials also recommend top-up shots, for both Covid and flu.

READ ALSO: Who should get top-up Covid and flu jabs in Switzerland?

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