Spain’s death toll passes 1,000 as hotels become hospitals

Another steep daily rise in cases and fatalities comes as officials order all tourist accommodations to close.

Spain - hotel hospital - reuters
A patient arrives by ambulance at a hotel that has been set up to treat non-critical coronavirus patients in Madrid [Susana Vera/Reuters]

Spain’s death toll from the coronavirus epidemic soared to 1,002 on Friday from 767 on the previous day, reported the country’s health emergencies chief, Fernando Simon.

The number of registered cases in the country also rose sharply to 19,980 on Friday from 17,147 on Thursday, Simon said.

The Spanish government has ordered the closure of all hotels in the country and promised to implement special measures in nursing homes after a surge in new cases and deaths.

Spain is the second worst-hit country in Europe after Italy.

All hotels and other tourist accommodations must be shut within seven days to “guarantee the containment of the pandemic”, in a further hit to the country’s already ailing tourism sector.

Spain, the second most-visited country in the world in 2018, has already closed its land borders to all but its nationals and residents.

Long-term boarding houses were exempted from the closure, but still subjected to a state of emergency imposed by the government almost a week ago which bars people from all but essential outings.

“The toughest moments are still to come, those moments when we will continue to see an increase in the number of cases,” Health Minister Salvador Illa said on Thursday.

Several thousand troops have been deployed in dozens of cities across the country to help with decontamination efforts, triage and policing. Army units were deployed for the first time on Thursday in the independence-minded region of Catalonia, for disinfection tasks at Barcelona’s airport and port.

The restrictions were giving “very good results” almost a week in, Transport Minister Jose Luis Abalos told reporters. Road traffic has fallen to one-tenth from the same period in 2019, air traffic by more than a half, while medium- and long-distance trains had only a 2 percent occupancy, he said, adding there were no plans to fully shut down air traffic.

Nursing homes have come into the spotlight during the crisis, with prosecutors in Madrid opening an investigation on Wednesday into more than 17 coronavirus-related deaths at a nursing home where patients had been locked down without access to hospital care.

The authorities have not specified how many people have died in nursing homes, but the prosecutor general’s office said it was also looking into the issue, as similar cases were reported at other facilities and nurses said they did not have enough protective gloves and masks.

Deputy Prime Minister Pablo Iglesias said nursing homes had to be urgently equipped with proper medical facilities and staff, calling it “an absolute priority”.

Fiscal help 

Fernando Simon, the head of the health emergency centre, said Spain was “probably slowly approaching the peak of cases”.

In downtown Madrid, the Ayre Gran Hotel Colon opened its doors on Thursday after fitting its rooms with medical equipment. Hotels in Madrid have offered 60,000 beds to the health service, authorities said.

The government has promised that no one in a “difficult situation” would have home utility services cut for non-payment.

The epidemic continued to hammer the labour market, with IAG’s Iberia airlines proposing temporarily laying off up to 90 percent of its flying staff for three months, and carmaker Nissan saying it would indefinitely send home up to 3,000 workers.

In an interview with Antena 3 TV, Economy Minister Nadia Calvino called for a European Union-wide fiscal response after praising the latest European Central Bank’s bond purchase scheme to help blunt the impact of the pandemic.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Wednesday predicted an economic slump this year in Spain, although he said a 200 billion euro ($220bn) package of measures to help companies and protect workers and other vulnerable groups could bolster a swift recovery.

Source: Reuters