Thursday, 19th September 2024

Italy begins to emerge from world’s longest nationwide lockdown

Monday, 4th May 2020

Italians will be free to stroll and visit relatives for the first time in nine weeks on Monday as Europe's hardest-hit country slides back the world's longest nationwide coronavirus lockdown.

Four million people an estimated 72% of the men will return to their construction sites and factories as the economically and emotionally broken country try to get back to work.

Restaurants that have managed to survive Italy's most destructive crisis in generations will reopen for takeaway service. But bars and even ice cream parlours will remain shut. The use of public transport will be controlled and everyone will have to wear masks in indoor public spaces.

40-year-old Stefano Milano said in Rome, "We are feeling a mix of joy and fear."

"There will be great happiness in being able to go running again happy, in my son being allowed to have his little cousin over to blow out his birthday candles, to see our parents," the father-of-three said. "But we are also worried because they are old and my father-in-law has cancer so is high risk".

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte began by putting a part of the population in the northern industrial heartland on lockdown on March 8. "Today is our moment of responsibility," Conte told the nation. "We cannot let our guard down."

Almost everything except for pharmacies and grocery stores was shuttered across the Mediterranean country of 60 million on March 12.

Conte's final roll of the dice involved closing all non-essential factories on March 22.

Italy's economy the eurozone's third-largest last year is expected to shorten more than in any year since the global depression of the 1930s.

Half of the workforce is receiving state support and the same number told a top pollster that they were afraid of becoming unemployed. And some of those who are out of a job already say they do not entirely trust in Conte's ability to safely navigate the nation out of peril.

"I am worried about the reopening. The authorities seem very undecided about how to proceed" 37-year-old Davide Napoleoni told AFP. Conte's popularity has jumped along with that of most of the other world leaders grappling with the pandemic thanks to a rally around the flag effect.

But a Demos poll conducted at the end of April found some of Conte's lustre fading. Confidence in his government has moved by eight percentage points to a still-strong 63 per cent since March.

Italy's huge reopening is complicated by a highly decentralised system that allows the country's 20 regions to layer on their own rules.

Venice's Veneto and the southern Calabria regions have thus been serving food and drink at bars and restaurants with outdoor seating since last week.

The area around Genoa is thinking of allowing small groups of people to go sailing and reopening its beaches.

Neighbouring Emilia-Romagna is keeping them closed even to those who live by the sea.

All this uncertainty appears to be weighing on the nation's psyche.

A poll by the Piepoli Institute showed 62% of Italians think they will need psychological support with coming to grips with the post-lockdown world.

"The night of the virus continues," sociologist Ilvo Diamanti wrote in La Repubblica daily.

"And you can hardly see the light on the horizon. If anything, we're getting used to moving in the dark."