Friday, May 22, 2026

Coronavirus: Local leaders in a global crisis

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All coronavirus is local.

The pandemic has triggered a worldwide crisis and consumed global politics. But every COVID-19 case, every layoff, every lockdown is also the story of a local community.

To get a sense of how the crisis has affected places and politics beyond the Brussels bubble and national capitals, POLITICO reporters spoke to 28 mayors and other local leaders across Europe (one from each EU country and one from the U.K.).

From the Western Isles of Scotland to Kastoria in northern Greece, from a tiny Spanish village in the foothills of the Pyrenees to the Swedish city of Gothenburg, we asked every leader the same questions. Their answers offer a snapshot of how the coronavirus has touched communities around the Continent in very different ways — but left none unscathed.


Innsbruck, Austria  |  Enghien, Belgium  |  Momchilovtsi, Bulgaria  |  Supetar, Croatia  |  Limassol, Cyprus  |  Brno, Czech Republic  |  Bornholm, Denmark  |  Saaremaa, Estonia  |  Rovaniemi, Finland  |  Ariège department, France  |  Rosenheim, Germany  |  Kastoria, Greece  |  Uszka, Hungary  |   Galway City, Ireland  |  Lampedusa and Linosa, Italy  |  Valmiera, Latvia  |  Klaipeda, Lithuania  | Grevenmacher, Luxembourg  |  St. Paul’s Bay, Malta  |   Bernheze, Netherlands  |  Zgorzelec, Poland  |  Ovar, Portugal  |  ÃŽntorsura, Romania  |  Banská Bystrica, Slovakia  |  Å marje pri JelÅ¡ah, Slovenia  |  Berasáin, Spain  |  Gothenburg, Sweden  |  Western Isles, Scotland, U.K.


🇦🇹  Georg Willi, mayor of Innsbruck, Austria

Where? Tyrol’s regional capital with a population of about 130,000. Surrounded by breathtaking Alpine scenery, the medieval city attracts more than a million tourists every year. It also lies at the nexus of Europe’s most important north-south trade route: the Brenner Pass, the gateway to southern Europe, which is just 43 km to the south.

Biggest problem? “Keeping the city running around the clock,” said Willi, 61, who belongs to the Green party. Innsbruck registered Austria’s first official coronavirus cases (a hotel receptionist and her boyfriend from Lombardy, Italy) in late February. Navigating the crisis with “very little knowledge,” while adhering to a flurry of new state and federal rules has proved challenging, he said.

Needs from government/EU? Emergency funds from Vienna have been approved by the government and parliament, but getting money into people’s pockets is taking too long. “It needs to go faster,” Willi said.

From Europe, he wants to see more solidarity with hard-hit countries. “Countries like Germany and Austria that have gotten through the crisis in good shape can’t just look at Italy and say, ‘that’s not our problem,’” he says.

Longer-term worries: No worries, but the hope that if we can learn from the experience, we’ll emerge smarter and stronger.

Any upside? “We’ve learned the value of maintaining regional economic structures and supply chains,” he says.

What’s the media missing? That the crisis represents a perfect opportunity to really get serious about combating climate change by retooling the way cities function, whether through more pedestrian areas or bike lanes. “There’s no vaccine for climate change.”

How are you coping? “Very well! Many relationships, including mine, have benefited from the crisis because we’re spending more time with one another.”

Anything else? “Slowing down can improve your quality of life.”

— Matthew Karnitschnig

⏫ Select another country

 

🇧🇪  Olivier Saint-Amand, mayor of Enghien, Belgium

Where? On the border of Flanders and Wallonia, a municipality of 14,000 people. It is part of one of Belgium’s poorest provinces, Hainaut.

Biggest problem? The town is sorely lacking personal protective equipment for nursing homes. “There was a clear lack of anticipation from the federal government. We had to find solutions — to sew face masks ourselves because care homes could not even provide them to their employees,” said Saint-Amand, a member of the Ecolo green party.

Needs from government/EU? Saint-Amand said help was needed long before now. Authorities should have paid much more attention to care homes and worked to have a consistent approach across the country. “We were in a fog,” he said.

Long-term worries? “The economic impact, including the burden on households, worries me a lot. Sooner or later, we will get over the virus, but the economic blow might take months or years to overcome.”

Any upside? A new vision of society might emerge: “Lots of mayors in the region think the emphasis should now be on short supply chains — we can’t rely on China for everything!”

What’s the media missing? Saint-Amand pointed to a government decision in 2017 to destroy stocks of face masks that had passed their expiry date and not replace them. He accused Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès and Health Minister Maggie De Block of a cover-up. “The lack of preparation was such that they preferred to lie to protect themselves for not providing face masks,” he said. (Wilmès denied such accusations in an open letter to Belgian surgeons, who sounded the alarm over the lack of protective gear back in March.)

How are you coping? “For the first four to five weeks, I was honestly close to breakdown. Everything had to be done in a hurry — finding supplies, making decisions and keeping up with the news.”

— Camille Gijs

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🇧🇬  Siyka Surkova, mayor of Momchilovtsi, Bulgaria

Where? Village in the south of the country, perched on the slopes of Rodopi mountains, close to the Greek border. Around 1,200 residents, mostly elderly. Famous for giving its name to a yogurt drink, produced by one of the biggest dairy companies in China, and hosting an annual yogurt festival.

Biggest problem? Momchilovtsi is a place where life happens on the street, so initially Surkova had a hard time convincing people to hunker down at home. She also had to make sure vulnerable residents got meals, grocery shopping and medicines: “The closest pharmacy is 20 km away.”

Needs from government/EU? Funding to renovate the water supply system and fix other infrastructure. “Development of small towns and villages deserves the same attention as big cities,” Surkova said. “Tourists won’t magically appear in Momchilovtsi unless roads are maintained properly.”

Longer-term worries? “Young people have been leaving rural areas in scores. We need to create more jobs, so we can reverse the trend.”

Any upside? Surkova hopes the pandemic might rekindle interest in rural life: “Many people who own vacation homes in the village came back and spent quarantine here.”

What’s the media missing? “I would like to see more stories about the psychological toll that the pandemic and self-isolation is having on people.”

How are you coping? “I haven’t had a single day off since the beginning of the lockdown in March. But working closely with residents and catering to their needs kept me going. Hikes in the mountains around the village also help.”

Anything else? Small businesses have been struggling to stay afloat. Surkova worries that some guest houses and family-owned businesses might not weather the storm.

— Boryana Dzhambazova

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🇭🇷 Ivana Marković, mayor of Supetar, island of Brač, Croatia

Where? Brač is the largest island off the southern coast of Croatia. Its main town, Supetar, holds the distinction of being almost entirely run by women. Marković oversaw an eight-year period of economic growth, which was brought to a grinding halt by the pandemic.

Biggest problem? “We barely had a case for two months. Two weeks ago when some lockdown measures were lifted, we became the new epicenter in Croatia,” said Marković, a Social Democrat. And the tourism sector has been devastated: “Our hotels open for tourists in March yet we still haven’t had our first guests for the season.”

Needs from government/EU? “The central government, in cooperation with the EU, needs to figure out a way for guests to come to our island safely. We’re the only [Croatian] island with an airport.”

Longer-term worries: Croatia places first in the EU when it comes to the share of GDP reliant on tourism, at 18.4 percent.

Any upside? “The island has eight units of local government, led by different parties. When this began, we set our party differences aside and started working as one.”

What’s the media missing? Small business owners on the islands earn a year’s worth of profits during the summer and may not be able to recover their losses until mid-2021.

How are you coping? “Being under lockdown on an island feels like you’re trapped, so you have to rely on each other’s support.”

Anything else? “If we can set our party agendas aside then the rest of Croatia should be able to do that too.”

— Una Hajdari

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🇨🇾  Nicos Nicolaides, mayor of Limassol, Cyprus

Where? The island’s second largest city and largest port, with an urban population of around 184,000. An influx of money thanks in part to the country’s controversial Golden Visa program has transformed the cityscape, with skyscrapers popping up as part of a construction boom.

Biggest problem? The spread of the virus was contained, with the local per capita infection rate about half the national average. But authorities faced a challenge in getting the message out in a city where every fourth resident is a foreigner. “Instructions were given in more than 40 languages,” Nicolaides said.

Needs from government/EU? Specific travel guidelines so that tourists and foreign investors can return. And the continuation of grants for local authorities to keep development projects afloat. 

Longer-term worries: Hundreds of cranes that stood idle for two months have started operating again, but it remains to be seen how many construction projects will continue. Tourists will also have to return soon if the local economy is not to take a huge hit. “Limassol is the main driver of the Cypriot economy. We should aim to make it the engine that will drive the country out of this crisis, without a growth in inequalities.”

Any upside? “The crisis activated the philanthropic and altruistic sentiments of the citizens. I saw many wallets opening and also many offers of volunteer work.”

What’s the media missing? The city council made sure citizens wouldn’t lose contact with culture by organizing and live-streaming theater productions. 

Anything else? “We are organizing the perfect conditions for tourists’ return,” said Nicolaides. The city is planning to go ahead with its wine festival in September.

— Nektaria Stamouli

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🇨🇿  Markéta Vaňková, mayor of Brno, Czech Republic

Where? The country’s second-largest city, located in the South Moravian region and sometimes called the “Czech Silicon Valley” because of its many tech firms.

Biggest problem so far? An “enormous risk” that the coronavirus would spread to the 2,500 residents of Brno’s nursing homes and to its homeless. So far, they have been spared, said Vaňková, a member of the center-right Civic Democratic Party (ODS). Also, Brno’s key gastronomy, culture and tourism sectors have been “hit very hard” by the lockdown.

Needs from national government/EU? Information from the government about easing the lockdown and support for businesses and the unemployed. From the EU, coordination to help restart the economy. “And we would like to see a common approach to the opening of borders in order to promote tourism.”

Any upside? Better time management, more efficient discussions, digital  communication can sometimes replace face-to-face meetings. Vaňková also said the community showed “great solidarity,” with students taking on voluntary work.

What the media missed? The reaction of the communities of foreigners living and working in Brno: “They were among the first to offer financial assistance.”

Long-term worries: A possible second wave of the pandemic: “No one can say if the situation will not be more complicated in autumn, especially if other relatively common respiratory diseases are added.” And uncertainty about the economic crisis. 

How are you personally coping? “Above all, I felt a huge responsibility and, at the same time, respect for the unknown danger that could compromise not only my loved ones, but also our entire city of 400,000 people. It was a situation for which there was no way of preparing in advance.”

                                                                                            — Siegfried Mortkowitz

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🇩🇰  Winni Grosbøll, mayor of Bornholm, Denmark

Where? An island of 40,000 people off the Swedish coast, a three-hour boat trip away from Copenhagen.

Biggest problem? The loss of tourism. “We normally have many visitors arriving during the summer, many of whom are German,” said Grosbøll, who also bemoaned a loss of export business with the U.S. and Asia: “That’s all gone now.”

Needs from government/EU? “We’re very dependent on government support” to compensate workers who are forced to stay at home because of the coronavirus, the 43-year-old Social Democrat said.

Longer-term worries: It’s taken a lot of work to pull the island out of poverty and increase its appeal as a destination for holidaymakers — and Danish politicians, who flock to Bornholm for the People’s Democratic Festival every summer. Not this year, though. “Four years ago we thought we were about to go into a golden period,” Grosbøll said. “Much of what we’ve built up over 10 years disintegrated over the period of a week.”

Any upside? There’s a newfound appreciation for cleanliness, and online meetings have proven their worth. Normally, “if we have to go to a meeting in Copenhagen, we fly or take the ferry,” the mayor said. “That’s something we could take a closer look at.”

What’s the media missing? The psychological consequences of isolation, Grosbøll said. Teenagers are restless and the pandemic has forced many old couples to separate for health reasons.

How are you coping? “I’m doing quite well,” she said with a laugh. “But I miss my work colleagues.”

— Bjarke Smith-Meyer

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🇪🇪  Kristiina Maripuu, deputy mayor of Saaremaa, Estonia

Where: Estonia’s largest island Saaremaa, with a population of around 31,500. Scene of one of the worst coronavirus outbreaks in the country.

Biggest problem? Officials believe the outbreak started at one busy event-filled weekend, featuring a volleyball match with a team from Italy. Estonia has recorded more than 1,780 cases. Around 550 cases and just under half of the country’s deaths have been in Saaremaa. “We feared

the worst. Now we can say that we have managed the situation very well,” Maripuu said. The island was quarantined from mainland Estonia from March 14 until May 8.

Needs from government? Advice on when borders can open and travel can resume would be useful. “This year we are thinking much more about [welcoming] our Estonian tourists, because it’s a difficult time for foreign tourists,” Maripuu said.

Long-term worries: “When people are struggling with work and business isn’t going well, this is a difficult time for many families. The hard times haven’t ended yet.”

Any upsides? “This crisis situation makes it easy to see who you can rely on and who you can’t.” 

What’s the media missing? How accurate is testing? “I was ill, and was sure I had the disease, but was tested negative,” Maripuu said. “My parents were really ill too. They had all the symptoms and were hospitalized but tested negative.”

How are you coping? Everyone is in good health now, but “these two months have been the longest time I haven’t seen my parents and grandmother ever.”

— Melissa Heikkilä

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🇫🇮  Esko Lotvonen, mayor of Rovaniemi, Finland

Where: Capital of Lapland, Finland’s northernmost province. Population: 62,900, most famous resident: Santa Claus. The city has only had around two dozen confirmed coronavirus cases.

Biggest problem? Tourism has come to a complete halt. Two-thirds of Rovaniemi’s tourists come from abroad, and the vast majority are from China. Lotvonen is still optimistic his city will persevere: “We are not a mass tourism destination. You can enjoy the Northern Lights and nightless night in smaller groups too,” Lotvonen said. 

Needs from the government/EU? “I hope the EU will take into account that for the next few years we will have to rebuild our industrial policy,” Lotvonen said. “The EU should support this work in terms of its recovery measures,” he added. This should include building broadband networks in sparsely populated areas. 

Longer-term worries: “The coronavirus cannot make us abandon our long-term strategies. We want to make sure climate change stays high up on the agenda,” Lotvonen said. 

Any upside? The way digitalization has changed how people work. Lotvonen said Rovaniemi city employees will continue to work remotely until mid-August. 

What’s the media missing? “The children of the world can rest assured that Santa Claus does not have the coronavirus and is healthy,” Lotvonen said. 

How are you coping? “I have learned how to have videoconferences. I had four today!” he said. It also helped that Lapland had good cross country skiing conditions up until May so the mayor could get some exercise and fresh air. 

— Melissa Heikkilä

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🇫🇷  Christine Téqui, president of the Ariège department, France

Where? Nestled in the Pyrenees, south of Toulouse, the aeronautics capital of Europe, and close to Andorra. It has largely been spared from the health crisis related to coronavirus but two main economic sectors, tourism and agriculture, have suffered.

Biggest problem? Some people “are going to experience great precariousness” financially. And “tourism is affected, we had a winter season that wasn’t great … and our summer season is going to be subdued.”

Needs from government/EU? More than half of locals employed in tourism are currently out of work so Téqui wants the government to look at the possibility of a basic income and reforming unemployment benefit. From the EU, help for local aeronautics firms, which are closely integrated with others across Europe: “There’s a European reality in this industrial sector.”

Long-term worries? “Relaunching tourism … So far we have little visibility in terms of how restaurants and cafés can reopen and whether owners will be able to stay profitable with the new health guidelines.”

Any upside? Jam producers switched to producing gels, table-cloth makers started making masks. And farmers set up drive-through markets, where people could pick up orders placed in advance.

What’s the media missing? Perhaps how much people have turned to consuming more local products and how much appreciation logistics workers deserve.

How are you coping? “It was extremely brutal, we learned right before a weekend that we were going into lockdown, and we had barely 72 hours to tell a large number of our people to work remotely … But it also highlighted how well we can work together with different levels of the state and taught us to be agile, adaptable, and perform well quickly.”

— Rym Momtaz

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🇩🇪  Andreas März, mayor of Rosenheim, Germany (freshly elected on May 1) 

Where? Transport hub and wealthy Bavarian city of 63,000 near the Austrian border. 

Biggest problem? A major challenge is “to keep people happy, to prevent the public from becoming desperate, frustrated and to lose perspective.” Easing tough lockdown restrictions is bringing people back onto the streets: “When I look out of the window, the hustle and bustle in the pedestrian zone doesn’t much differ from a normal working day before March 1.”

Needs from government/EU? Financial support has helped cushion the economic fallout, but local communities will likely struggle long into the future. “We’ll need some kind of rescue package on that front,” said März, a member of the conservative Christian Social Union. Government-imposed restrictions on mass gatherings would help ensure people stick with social distancing “even if it’d be legally tricky to do.”

Longer-term worries: A second wave of infections. “If the numbers go up again, because people are moving freely again, then we have a problem,” März said. “A second wave wouldn’t only hit us economically but also affect people’s mental state.”

Any upside? For März, the crisis has shown that working and schooling online is possible. It’s also shown Germany’s health system is “excellent” compared to other places in Europe and the world: “I feel well taken care of here.”  

What’s the media missing? While media attention centered on a coronavirus outbreak in the city’s asylum center, there’s been little coverage of how people are faring in the rest of the city.

How are you coping? Despite the challenge, März is relishing his new role: He’s dreamt of becoming mayor of Rosenheim since he was a young boy. 

— Kalina Oroschakoff

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🇬🇷  Yiannis Korentsidis, mayor of Kastoria, Greece

Where? City of around 36,000 people in northern Greece, famous for its beautiful lake and its fur industry.

Biggest problem? The city and the broader area were the first to be hit by the pandemic in Greece and recorded one of the highest per capita death tolls.

Needs from government/EU? Incentives for people to stay in the city and work and help for local businesses. Local authorities are applying for EU grants to promote tourism in the area. “The next days will be very hard,” Korentsidis said.

Longer-term worries: There were few jobs even before the pandemic because of a crisis in the fur industry, with revenues down by 90 percent since 2014. “The few young people remaining might soon leave.”

Any upside? The community’s hospital has been upgraded with new equipment, and health and local officials have shown they know how to handle a crisis. Hopefully more personnel will be hired at the hospital soon too.

What’s the media missing? “We were asking for strict movement restrictions two weeks before they were eventually imposed. Maybe if that happened earlier the spread would have been smaller.”

How are you coping? “I didn’t close my eyes even for a second in the first three days of the quarantine in the area, but I believe that nothing is difficult if you come out of it healthy eventually.”

Anything else? Because the area experienced a more severe outbreak than the rest of Greece, local people have been insulted and rejected as seasonal tourism workers, even though the city has been virus-free for more than a month.

— Nektaria Stamouli

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🇭🇺  Gizella Borbély, mayor of Uszka, Hungary

Where? Village in eastern Hungary, close to the border with Ukraine. The population is predominantly from the Roma minority and the Christian faith plays a major role in the community. A government public works scheme is the main source of formal employment. 

Biggest problem? Borbély said her first concern was how to quickly deliver food to the elderly and buy protective equipment. Now, a big challenge is the return of villagers who had been working in Budapest and Germany. When people came home from the capital “their little money ran out … and the local government had to help,” Borbély said. There is now a fear that if workers return to Budapest and Germany, they could end up bringing the virus back to the village. 

Needs from government/EU? Job creation. The community isn’t demanding direct payments for individuals but wants ways to keep them employed: “We are not asking for fish, but a net.”

Longer-term worries: “If, God forbid, this disease comes here, we are afraid that then people won’t be able to work in public works, and then they won’t have a salary, and they won’t be able to provide for basic living needs.”  

How are you coping? Work as village mayor has become harder, and there are more requests for help, Borbély said. On the bright side: Villagers are planting trees, and prayer and singing continue in the congregations.

What about the border? The situation in Ukraine “is much worse,” Borbély said. The border is closed, meaning that relatives living on either side cannot meet.

— Lili Bayer

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🇮🇪  Mike Cubbard, mayor of Galway City, Ireland

Where? A city of about 79,000 people in western Ireland. A major tourist destination due to its many festivals, lively pubs and proximity to natural attractions along the coast, Galway is a 2020 European Capital of Culture.

Biggest problem? From a tourism perspective, Galway’s current situation is like “falling off a cliff,” Cubbard said. Tourists are gone and the events surrounding the city’s year as Capital of Culture have been either canceled or postponed. “Restaurants, bars, hotels, etc. will be the biggest impacted,” the mayor said. 

Needs from government/EU? About a third of the local government’s budget could be wiped out. “We’ve been quite concerned here that obviously our figure will be higher than many other cities because of our reliance on the hospitality sector,” Cubbard said. He wants national government assistance to take into account that some areas of the country have been hit harder than others economically. 

Any upside? The crisis has “brought a lot of people back full circle to the whole idea of community again,” Cubbard said.  

How are you coping? The mayor’s daily work has completely changed. From doing about 13-15 public events per week, such as visiting schools and taking walks with residents, Cubbard has switched to working online.

— Lili Bayer

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🇮🇹  Totò Martello, mayor of Lampedusa and Linosa, Italy

Where? Italy’s southernmost point, 115 nautical miles from Sicily and 75 from Africa. The two islands are home to 6,500 people — a number that normally triples in summer.

Biggest problem? Sealed off from the mainland, islands should be free from the pandemic, but the seasonal arrival of migrants has put Lampedusa under strain. “There is no crisis today solely due to coronavirus, but an asphyxiating situation that’s been going on for some time now,” said Martello. In recent weeks, more than 200 migrants have arrived on its shores. With the reception center already full of migrants in quarantine, more 100 people were forced to spend a night on the pier before being taken to Sicily by boat.

Need from government/EU? Martello asked the government to moor a quarantine ship for migrants near Lampedusa, “a place where they can keep themselves safe and also keep others safe.” The government contracted a ferry boat, now moored in front of the island.

Longer-term worries: The 2020 summer season is “already completely lost,” and Martello worries about the longer-term future. Italy’s chief anti-mafia prosecutor warned about the risks of struggling businesses falling prey to organized crime. “Failed enterprises that lack liquidity … will end up in the hands of individuals who have the liquidity to buy for a cheap price everything we built over the past 50 years.”

How are you coping? “Since coronavirus hit, you’re in the front line, taking a beating from everyone … We mayors have been everyone’s favorite target for insults and praise. We had to do things beyond our competence, we had to substitute ourselves physically for the state,” said Martello. “You must step in, because you’re the only institution that people still have a personal, human connection with.”

— Paola Tamma

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🇱🇻  Jānis Baiks, mayor of Valmiera, Latvia

Where? A historic industrial center of around 25,000 people at the crossing point of important trans-Baltic routes, Valmiera lies on the A3 highway between the capital Riga and the Estonian border. 

Biggest problem? The hospitality trade is hurting badly, said Baiks, a member of the party For Valmiera and Vidzeme, as the flow of Latvian and Estonian guests leaving the A3 for Valmiera’s hotels and restaurants has dried up: “A lot of businesses have closed.” Uncertainty is compounding the problem. “We just don’t understand how long this will go on for or how bad it will get.”

Needs from government/EU? Valmiera’s bigger industrial employers, including a glass fiber plant and a jerry can maker are still in operation, Baiks said, meaning the town is better off than some other cities in Latvia. However, smaller companies are going to need help to recover once the crisis recedes. “The EU might need to change some of its support programs in Latvia … so they focus on certain industries which need more help and maybe where more people work.”

Any upsides? Cooperation between public bodies, like the emergency services, the police and others has proven effective, which has been heartwarming, Baiks said. And NGOs have really stepped up. “A lot of people have been ready, for free, to come together and help.” 

What’s the media missing? It is not so much what’s missing, but what is being reported that’s the problem sometimes, Baiks said. “Sometimes the media publish something that hasn’t been checked, so we tell our inhabitants to always check the source.”

— Charlie Duxbury

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🇱🇹  Vytautas Grubliauskas, mayor of Klaipeda, Lithuania

Where? Lithuania’s third biggest city and its main port on the Baltic Sea. Previously known as Memelburg, the city’s castle was founded by the Teutonic Knights at what remains an important meeting point of key waterways.

Biggest problem? As a gateway to Lithuania, via its port and airport, Klaipeda found itself “at the frontline” of the country’s fight against coronavirus, said Grubliauskas, a center-right leaning politician: “We have a lot of guests and activities, making our city one of the hottest spots in Lithuania for the virus.”

Needs from government/EU? Like most places, Klaipeda had to scramble to get basic equipment to keep workers in hospitals and elsewhere safe, Grubliauskas said: “The main challenge was the big deficit of all the things to protect the people who needed to be protected.”

Longer-term worries? The worst scenario would be if people were to relax too early. “We must think about the second and third wave of the virus,” Grubliauskas said. “Better to relax the restrictions five days too late than one day too early.”

Any upside? The advantages of working remotely have become clearer for people and organizations: “It won’t be so easy to come back to the offices.”

What’s the media missing? There’s been too much sensationalizing of statistics of deaths and infections, the mayor said. More attention should be on how to avoid the virus. “Hopefully lessons have been learned,” Grubliauskas said. 

How are you coping? The pandemic has meant more time at home with the family: “I hope we learnt that spending time together is important, even in normal times.”

— Charlie Duxbury

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🇱🇺  Léon Gloden, mayor of Grevenmacher, Luxembourg

Where? A small wine-growing community of around 5,000 people, connected to Germany by a short bridge over the river Moselle — which became a border checkpoint due to coronavirus measures taken by Berlin. The town vigorously protested the border closure, keeping flags at half-mast in the run-up to Europe Day. 

Biggest problem? “These stupid — really stupid — border controls.” Normally 15,000 commuters cross the bridge every day, but that number more than halved. The German checkpoints, initially manned by police with automatic firearms, were reminiscent of wartime, Gloden said — angering and scaring residents. Traffic clogged up Grevenmacher’s roads and families were divided. After weeks of protests, Germany reopened the border on May 16.

Needs from government/EU? Ursula von der Leyen’s Commission was a “big failure” on the border issue, Gloden complained. “They didn’t do anything. I haven’t even heard a speech of Mrs. von der Leyen about this issue — nothing,” he said.

Longer-term worries: Anger toward Germans may not abate quickly. “I receive emails that we should build up on the Luxembourg side concentration camps and just put the Germans there,” he said. 

Any upside? No.

How are you coping? Gloden is juggling three jobs: Grevenmacher mayor, member of the Luxembourg parliament and partner at one of the country’s largest law firms.

Anything else? “I just hope that Europe has learned about these stupid border controls and that this will not happen again for whatever reason.”

— Hannah Brenton

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🇲🇹  Alfred Grima, mayor of St. Paul’s Bay, Malta

Where? Northern Maltese town named after the Shipwreck of St. Paul. Wider region contains the tourist resorts of Buġibba and Qawra. Population of almost 30,000 before the tourists arrive.

Biggest problem? At first it was that St. Paul’s Bay “appeared to be at a bigger risk than other, smaller towns due to its dense population,” Grima said. But most people have “followed the daily directives issued by the health department.” Now, “the most challenging part is in finding the best way to inform migrants and refugees who live in our community about the pandemic and the need of social distancing and quarantine rules.”

Needs from government/EU? The authorities in Malta “are doing a splendid job,” said Grima, a member of the ruling Labour Party. “I cannot say the same about the EU.” The bloc “left Italy to fend for itself” at the start of the crisis, and now Malta “is being left alone to shoulder the burden of illegal immigration during one of the worst pandemic crises.” The EU should come up with “tangible funding schemes to help get businesses and families back on track.”

Longer-term worries: Competition among tourism destinations “will be fiercer than ever after this pandemic is over.” Plus, there are concerns about “families without enough income and the repercussions of it.”

Any upside? “We have much less traffic on our busy streets, which means less pollution.” Plus, “solidarity is everywhere. People are doing their best to help others.”

How are you coping? “I am following the issued directives,” said Grima, but “as a mayor with a very busy schedule, I am more exposed to the virus than some.”

— Paul Dallison

⏫ Select another country

 

🇳🇱  Marieke Moorman, mayor of Bernheze, the Netherlands

Where? A small municipality in the southern Netherlands of about 30,000 inhabitants. One of the hardest hit communities in the country, having reported more than 60 deaths. 

Biggest problem? “There is a lot of grief and mourning — we are a small community, and every death has a big impact,” said Moorman. “Most of those who’ve passed away were seniors, many who kept our community running through voluntary work.”

Needs from government? “The government has done a hell of a job coming up with a package of financial measures that are helping our entrepreneurs short-term,” she said. But, Moorman noted, the first coronavirus case was detected in the south on February 27 and Prime Minister Mark Rutte only advised people to stop shaking hands on March 9.

Longer-term worries? “This region has been hit very badly during the coronavirus crisis, but also in terms of poor air quality, as when Q fever [an infectious disease caused by bacteria] hit in 2007,” said Moorman, a member of the center-left Labor Party. “I hope we will look in the near future at the links between lung diseases and poor air quality.”

Any upside? “I have seen in Bernheze a lot of social resilience and willingness to help each other, as well as a realization that we don’t have to fly four times a year to Barcelona or Istanbul in order to live a full life — I hope some of that will stick after the crisis.”

How are you coping? “I call the next of kin off all the people who have died, which affects me a lot, so I made it a habit to only call four each day.”

— Eline Schaart

⏫ Select another country

 

🇵🇱  RafaÅ‚ Gronicz, mayor of Zgorzelec, Poland

Where? Town of some 31,000 people, nestled close to borders with Germany and the Czech Republic.

Biggest problem so far? For two months, local people couldn’t cross the borders without facing a two-week quarantine, which stopped them going to work in Germany and separated families. “It was a very bizarre situation: Their companies were working but they just couldn’t get to work,” said Gronicz, a member of the Civic Platform opposition party. 

Needs from national government/EU? Clarity in planning: “I’d like to know what the government is planning to do in the next month, six months, a year,” Gronicz said. He also stressed the EU could give regions more money for investments, as the crisis has left big holes in their budgets. He also wants to see an EU strategy for dealing with crises, which would take account of the challenges for cross-border regions.  

Biggest longer-term worries? “We’re facing an absolute collapse of local authorities’ budgets, we’ll have to save money on everything.”

Any upside? Only one thing: Young people will start to realize how important free movement is, Gronicz said. “When they had to stand for hours at the border crossing, maybe they got their eyes opened.” 

What’s the media missing? First: how poorly schools were prepared for online education. Second: Foreign citizens, especially those from the Baltic states, who were stuck at the border with no possibility of transit. 

How are you personally coping? “We’re muddling through,” he said, adding that he’s trying to work every day on a long-term perspective for the community.

— Zosia Wanat

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🇵🇹  Salvador Malheiro, mayor of Ovar, Portugal

Where? Municipality of around 55,000 people in central Portugal. Home to major factories for firms including Bosch and known for Pão de ló sponge cake, a national delicacy. First community in the country to be locked down following a high number of local cases.

Biggest problem? “We had moments of great distress after the government quarantined the municipality,” said Malheiro, vice president of the opposition center-right Social Democrats. “It was the solution that had to be implemented,” but businesses in Ovar had no choice but to come to a halt while “watching other competing municipalities’ businessmen being able to work.” 

Need from government/EU? Financial assistance. Ovar “did not wait for the government or Brussels” but spent its own money to tackle the outbreak — on everything from hospital beds through sampling and protective equipment to quarantine logistics. “We felt a bit alone,” but hope the investment “will be reimbursed by the government using EU funds.”

Long-term worries? A second wave across the country: “The partial success we had will only continue if each one of us does what has to be done. We need to know how to live with this virus.”

Any upside? Community spirit has come to the fore and perhaps new opportunities will emerge. “Opportunities arise in the wake of a crisis,” said Malheiro. “Businessmen are able to adapt to new challenges.”

What’s the media missing? The discrepancy between numbers of COVID-19 cases reported locally and those announced by the national government. “The media should confront the government about these numbers.”

How are you coping? “I haven’t slept much, but I gave everything I have.”

— Ivo Oliveira

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🇷🇴 Marian Cioi, mayor of ÃŽntorsura, Romania

Where: Village of some 1,500 people in southwestern Romania. Many local young people travel to Germany for seasonal work, have moved to big cities or now live abroad.

Biggest problem? Some people who returned from hard-hit areas in Italy and from seasonal work in Germany had to ask the mayor for help getting food, as they had to self-quarantine for 14 days after arrival. But the village has not recorded any coronavirus cases. Cioi said he used money from the public budget to buy face masks that he distributed to local people.

Needs from government? Clear laws on providing food and other necessities to people self-quarantining, and guidance on how to help children who have to follow online classes but have no tablets or computers. “I would have liked clear and precise laws,” said Cioi, a member of the governing National Liberal Party.

Any upsides? The crisis pushed council officials and locals to try to communicate digitally, by sending emails and using WhatsApp to reach out to the mayor.

What’s the media missing? Cioi would have liked to see more advertising on TV to fight conspiracy theories about the spread of the virus and help people understand it’s serious, even if there were no cases reported in the village.

— Carmen Paun

⏫ Select another country

 

🇸🇰  Martina Strmeňová, community organizer, Banská Bystrica, Slovakia

Where? The city is known as the base of neo-Nazi leader Marian Kotleba, whose People’s Party-Our Slovakia (LSNS) got 17 seats in February’s general election. The Not in Our Town civic platform was formed in response to Kotleba’s rise, and gathers local politicians, church leaders and activists.

Biggest problem? Lockdown did not stop far-right supporters harassing marginalized communities. They drove by the city’s high-rise neighborhoods, surrounding villages and Roma settlements and shouted offensive remarks. The community organizers were criticized “even by Prime Minister Igor Matovič” on one occasion for helping kids in vulnerable communities keep up with online lessons. 

Needs from government/EU? Strmeňová says Not in Our Town can operate even without the financial support of the government but that it should not place obstacles in their way: “Matovič told us to bring them food and not focus on their education. This misses the point.”

Longer-term worries: The right-leaning government of disparate parties that took office during lockdown and has yet to reveal its true political colors, Strmeňová said.“We’re scared about what will happen after the pandemic,” she said. “We don’t want to become Poland or Hungary.”

Any upside? Even during the crisis, the National Criminal Agency has arrested high-level members of the previous government over corruption allegations, suggesting Matovič is delivering on a campaign promise to root out graft.

What’s the media missing? Also during the crisis, an annual human rights report by the national ombudsman’s office was rejected by parliament for the first time — for “not protecting the rights of unborn children,” and focusing too much on “LGBT and women’s rights.”

Anything else? “The conservatives are not the only patriots. I’ve been in folk dance groups my whole life and probably know more about our traditions than they do.”

— Una Hajdari

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🇸🇮  Matija ÄŒakÅ¡, mayor of Å marje pri JelÅ¡ah, Slovenia

Where? A small community in eastern Slovenia that had the country’s highest number of COVID-19 fatalities, mostly in nursing homes. The government ordered the elderly to be treated and isolated in these homes rather than in hospitals.

Biggest problem? “We had problems convincing the government of how dire the situation was in our municipality since we were one of the first places to be hit.”

Needs from government/EU? “There are many hotels in our region that are owned by the government. We suggested that since all of these hotels were empty, we isolate the elderly in these hotels. That didn’t happen.”

Longer-term worries: Nursing homes in Slovenia operate according to outdated norms and have been critically understaffed for years. This could be a long-term problem if the government doesn’t tackle the issue of care workers going to richer European countries, such as neighboring Austria, where conditions are better.

Any upside? Slovenia has about 50 dialects and a Facebook page set up by two young men to cheer up the community and “preserve and nurture” the local one — Šmarski argo — drew people closer together.

What’s the media missing? “Our nursing homes were not prepared to offer these people the proper treatment.” Critics of the government’s policy say that the elderly were effectively written off or left to die — an allegation the government denies, insisting the palliative and geriatric care system as a whole was caught unprepared.

Anything else? “Fsi za Šmarje, Šmarje za fse!” (“All for Šmarje and Šmarje for all,” in Šmarski argo)

— Una Hajdari

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🇪🇸  Aitor Egozcue Guerendiain, mayor of Berasáin, Spain

Where? Village in the Navarre region of northern Spain with a population of just 25, mainly elderly citizens who live in ancient farmhouses. Isolated in the foothills of the Pyrenees, not a single resident has been infected with the coronavirus — a rarity in hard-hit Spain.

Biggest challenge: “Over half the population is over 65 so we’ve kept to ourselves and imposed a 15-day curfew on anyone coming into our valley. It’s worked and, honestly, we’re fine. The biggest hassle is getting fresh fish, which requires going down to another village, but there’s hardly any need for it; we have plenty of food stocked up for winters with heavy snowfall.”

Needs from government/EU? “Fiberoptic investment. We only got phone service in the 90s so we’re used to being disconnected, but the poor connections are making remote work impossible.”

Longer-term worries: “The economic blow. Local farmers are now using WhatsApp to try to sell cheese, eggs, beef, and we are trying to help each other out by buying, but the overall drop in demand is going to hurt us all.”

Any upside: “I think the struggle to get face masks from abroad drove home how much local production we’ve lost to globalization. Maybe this will make us open to spending a little more to support local businesses.”

What’s the media missing: “The distrust generated by the government’s lack of transparency. We have friends who are doctors who say the death tolls aren’t accurate, that the real numbers are far greater. That’s very disconcerting.”

How are you coping: “I go for walks in the woods. It’s mushroom season, so that helps.”

— Aitor Hernández-Morales

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🇸🇪   Axel Josefson, mayor of Gothenburg, Sweden

Where? Sweden’s second city, located on its west coast, is an industrial and cultural powerhouse with a population of around half a million.

Biggest problem? The big challenge right now is keeping the coronavirus out of elderly care homes. “We decided quite early on to forbid people from visiting these facilities and that has had an impact,” said Josefson, a member of the center-right Moderate Party.

Needs from government/EU? Stockholm is doing a good job on the whole, Josefson said, but he doesn’t think Gothenburg’s big tourist draw, the Liseberg theme park, should remain closed: “We want some adjustments made in the rules so we can have a responsible opening”. 

Longer-term worries? That the crisis will drag on. Who knows if the recovery will be “V” or “U” or something else-shaped, Josefson said, but the worry is that “it will take longer than people think”. 

Any upsides? The city has become more digital and more open to new solutions for communication and meetings, Josefson said. People also seem to be beginning to appreciate what they have in normal times a bit more — “just being able to go out and meet family and friends and have a job to go to, things like that.”

How are you coping? Friends have had the illness, and one of them was very sick, Josefson said. “But thank God that seems to be going alright now.” Not seeing your mother in person for two months isn’t easy either, he added. “For sure, that has affected me.”

— Charlie Duxbury

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🇬🇧  Roddie Mackay, leader of the Western Isles Council; Scotland, United Kingdom

Where? Windswept North Atlantic archipelago of just fewer than 27,000 people. Golden beaches and rugged scenery draw visitors from around the world. 

Biggest problem? The Western Isles have fewer than 10 COVID-19 cases and no fatalities but lockdown has had a “devastating” effect on the economy, said Mackay, who is not affiliated to a political party. Tourism, the main contributor to local GDP, has been “knocked for six.” 

Needs from government? The best post-lockdown assistance the Scottish government could provide from an economic perspective, Mackay said, would be better digital connectivity. Fiber broadband would be a “game changer” for businesses.

Longer-term worries: For the islands to regain sound financial footing, three vital economic sectors will need to be resurrected: tourism, fishing exports and Harris Tweed exports.

Any upside? The council’s long-held ambition to disperse jobs around the islands has been accelerated by remote-working measures.

What’s the media missing? Nothing essential, but the council is waging a cultural battle against self-isolation. “We’re running e-ceilidhs — putting local musicians and dancers online every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night.” Viewing figures have topped 4,000. 

How are you coping? Wide open spaces and good clean air help a lot. Most island people, Mackay said, are incredibly thankful for their lot — rather than resentful of the restrictions. “I don’t hear much complaining and moaning. I hear people saying ‘aren’t we so fortunate where we live?’”

Anything else? Wedding crashed: Mackay’s son, Neal, had his wedding, originally scheduled for April 24, postponed. It’s now a waiting game, for when “Nicola [Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon] tells them they can get married.” 

— Ali Walker

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Furious Shoppers Boot Out Woman Buying Groceries Without A Face Mask

A group of customers in a grocery store went ballistic as a woman shopped without a face mask, yelling at her until she walked off with her cart full of groceries.

The heated confrontation was captured on a video posted Saturday to Facebook on Saturday and quickly went viral on Twitter. “What happens in Staten Island when you don’t wear a mask in ShopRite!” noted the poster, who said it had been filmed by a friend who sent it to her.

It was a surprising scene given all the media attention recently to maskless demonstrators protesting against health and safety measures to help stop the spread of COVID-19. The people yelling at the shopper were over-the-top angry, and several shouted obscenities and insults.

Comments on social media ranged from attacks on the yelling “savages” to “finally” people are standing up for safety.

The woman who posted the video noted: “I get ppl are anxious NO reason to act the way some of them are … especially guy following her to scream at her and call her a pig!”

No one reached at the ShopRite stores on Staten Island would comment on the incident to HuffPost. 

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday that he won’t allow Staten Island to reopen businesses ahead of the rest of the city, as local lawmakers have requested. They’ve argued that certain required safety parameters have already been met. But Cuomo said the city has to move at a unified pace because of travel among the boroughs.

Almost 800 residents in Staten Island’s Richmond County have died of COVID-19, making it 25th on the list of counties in the nation with the highest number of deaths.

“All New Yorkers must wear a face covering when they need to be outside their home and may not be able to maintain at least 6 feet of distance between themselves and others, according to the New York City Department of Health. “Examples include riding the subway, ferry, or bus; riding in a taxi or car service; walking on a busy street; going to pharmacies and grocery stores; and going to the doctor or a hospital.”

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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Grimes And Elon Musk Tweak Baby’s Name To Include Roman Numerals

Grimes and Elon Musk have changed their baby’s name ― but it doesn’t make it any easier to figure out how to say it.

The Canadian singer-songwriter revealed the change in an Instagram comment on Sunday. She and SpaceX CEO Musk welcomed their first child together on May 4 and announced that they’d named him X Æ A-12 Musk.

However, the name raised questions as it did not comply with state naming guidelines; a spokesperson for the California Department of Health told HuffPost it would not be allowed. Characters outside of the 26 letters of the alphabet and numerals are not permitted.

A commenter on Grimes’ latest Instagram post asked if she’d changed the baby’s name because of California law. The singer then shared the new name, which swaps out the 12 with Roman numerals: X Æ A-Xii.

“Roman numerals. Looks better tbh,” she said in another comment, adding later that “one dash is allowed.”

It’s unclear if the new name would be accepted.

Grimes had explained the meaning behind the original name on Twitter:

As baffled fans guessed at how to say the baby’s name, it turned out that even the parents didn’t agree on how it should be pronounced.

During an appearance on “The Joe Rogan Experience” on May 7, the Tesla founder said it was pronounced “Just X, like the letter X. And then the ‘Æ’ is pronounced ‘ash.’”

He added: “And then A-12 is my contribution. The Archangel-12, the precursor to the SR-71, the coolest plane ever.”

However, Grimes, responding to an Instagram comment on the same day, had a different take on their child’s name: “It’s just X, like the letter X. Then A.I. Like how you said the letter A then I.”

Social media users continued to be baffled following the update to little X Æ A-Xii’s name:



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Storms and large waves forecast as winter takes hold

Following a weekend of icy temperatures and damaging storms, some states are still feeling the chill while others have returned to slightly warmer conditions.

A trough and cold front crossing Western Australia is triggering areas of heavy rain and a few storms, with a deep low off the south coast generating large waves.

A Tasman Low is directing gusty rain and large waves to the NSW coast.

Fog blankets Melbourne – May 26, 2020. (9News)

Conditions are mostly clear elsewhere with sunny and mild weather forecast in Queensland and the the Northern Territory.

Here is a breakdown of what the weather is doing in your state or territory today.

Sydney is in for another day of low temperatures and showers with a maximum of 19C today.

The rain is expected to ease tomorrow with a small chance of rain on Thursday.

May 24, 2020 in Sydney, Australia.
Teenagers chain-surf at South Curl Curl ocean pool as a large southerly swell hits the Sydney coastline on May 24, 2020 in Sydney, Australia. (Getty)

Wet weather is forecast along the NSW coast including Wollongong, Newcastle, Port Macquarie and Coffs Harbour.

A hazardous surf warning remains in place for Coffs Coast, Macquarie Coast, Hunter Coast, Sydney Coast, Illawarra Coast and Batemans Coast

Surf and swell conditions are expected to be dangerous for coastal activities such as rock fishing, boating, and swimming.

May 23, 2020 in Sydney, Australia.
A surfer is seen riding a wave during a huge swell at Bronte Beach in Sydney, Saturday, May 23, 2020. (AAP)

Canberra is in for a cold night with temperatures expected to fall to 2C in the evening.

Conditions with otherwise be cloudy and cool in ACT with a maximum of 15C forecast for the remainder of the week in Canberra.

Queensland has mostly recovered from the weekends cold weather with mild and sunny conditions forecast around the state.

Brisbane is sunny today with a maximum of 24C with similar weather in most areas across Queensland.

Thargomindah looks to have the coldest weather today with a minimum of 2C and frost in the morning, although the day is likely to warm up with a maximum of 18C.

Melbourne is feeling the chill this morning with a minimum of 5C with heavy fog shrouding the city.

Conditions are expected to improve throughout the day with sun and a maximum of 18C forecast later today.

A number of areas including Seymour, Mt Hotham and Wangaratta are expected to wake up to frost with temperatures dipping below 0C.

The rest of the state is mostly sunny with cool to mild temperatures throughout the day.

There a mixed condition across WA today as the state recovers from the weekend’s violent storms.

Surfers are seen in action at Port Beach in Perth, Monday, after severe storms over the weekend. (AAP)

Possible showers are forecast in Perth, Geraldton and Bunbury with maximum temperatures between 17C and 20C in those areas.

Heavier rain will hit Albany and thunderstorms are forecast in Eucia and Broome.

Cars navigate through floodwater on Riverside Drive in Perth CBD which is partially closed due to storm flooding on Monday, May 25, 2020. (AAP)

Areas including the South Coastal and South East Coastal forecast districts and parts of the Great Southern and Central Wheat Belt are also likely to feel the cold coming from a westerly wind today as a cold front moves across the state.  

Conditions will be mostly cloudy, cool in the southeast of the state today and mostly sunny but cool in the central region.

Showers and cool-to-mild temperatures are forecast in the west while areas in the north are expected to receive a late shower today.

Adelaide will be cloudy with a minimum of 8C and a maximum of 17C.

Hobart will be sunny but cool today with a minimum of 3C and a maximum of 15C.

Similar conditions are forecast around the state with most areas expected to be sunny but cool today.

Possible showers are forecast in Burnie.

Sunny weather is forecast around the NT today with Darwin expected to reach 30C later in the day.

Katherine, Nhulunbuy, Borroloola and Tennant Creek are also in for a sunny day with maximum temperatures in the high 20s.

Alice Springs is forecast to experience some cloudy weather with cooler temperatures only expected to reach 18C today.

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Grimes And Elon Musk Tweak Baby’s Name To Include Roman Numerals

Grimes and Elon Musk have changed their baby’s name ― but it doesn’t make it any easier to figure out how to say it.

The Canadian singer-songwriter revealed the change in an Instagram comment on Sunday. She and SpaceX CEO Musk welcomed their first child together on May 4 and announced that they’d named him X Æ A-12 Musk.

However, the name raised questions as it did not comply with state naming guidelines; a spokesperson for the California Department of Health told HuffPost it would not be allowed. Characters outside of the 26 letters of the alphabet and numerals are not permitted.

A commenter on Grimes’ latest Instagram post asked if she’d changed the baby’s name because of California law. The singer then shared the new name, which swaps out the 12 with Roman numerals: X Æ A-Xii.

“Roman numerals. Looks better tbh,” she said in another comment, adding later that “one dash is allowed.”

It’s unclear if the new name would be accepted.

Grimes had explained the meaning behind the original name on Twitter:

As baffled fans guessed at how to say the baby’s name, it turned out that even the parents didn’t agree on how it should be pronounced.

During an appearance on “The Joe Rogan Experience” on May 7, the Tesla founder said it was pronounced “Just X, like the letter X. And then the ‘Æ’ is pronounced ‘ash.’”

He added: “And then A-12 is my contribution. The Archangel-12, the precursor to the SR-71, the coolest plane ever.”

However, Grimes, responding to an Instagram comment on the same day, had a different take on their child’s name: “It’s just X, like the letter X. Then A.I. Like how you said the letter A then I.”

Social media users continued to be baffled following the update to little X Æ A-Xii’s name:



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Coronavirus updates LIVE: Novavax human trials begin in Melbourne as global COVID-19 cases surpass 5.4 million. Australian death toll stands at 102

“We’re really trying to get a level of confidence back in the industry,” he told ABC’s Radio National this morning.

Mr Butt said the support could keep apprentices in jobs, who have “absolutely” been losing their employment.

“Unfortunately they are seen as being dispensable for many people, yet they’re really the future of our industry.”

Yesterday, Housing Minister Michael Sukkar brushed off the industry’s request for a lifeline.

He said the government already had economic support in place, “[Of] which the construction industry is a massive beneficiary, particularly through JobKeeper and our support for apprentice wages,” he told AAP.

“We are continually monitoring the effect that COVID-19 is having on the economy, and I am in constant contact with key stakeholders and the states and territories to ensure new homes can still be built and tradies stay in jobs.”

Master Builders has pointed to economic modelling showing $13.2 billion in stimulus would result in $30.9 billion in gross domestic product while creating 105,500 construction jobs.

They claim it would also lead to $17.6 billion in construction across housing, renovations and commercial construction.

with AAP

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Twitter Users Mock Trump For Claiming He’s Getting Great COVID-19 Reviews

Twitter users brutally mocked President Donald Trump on Memorial Day for simultaneously claiming he’s getting “great reviews” for the way he’s handled the coronavirus pandemic and griping he’s not getting enough credit.

The tweet came Monday afternoon as U.S. deaths related to COVID-19 neared the 100,000 mark. Not that the president thought that was worth mentioning.

Many Twitter users were shocked by what they were reading.

Some people pointed out that the Trump’s handling of the pandemic is more of a lesson plan on what not to do.

Others wondered where these “reviews” were actually published and wished they could post their own.

One guy pointed out that Trump seems to be the guy for whom “participant trophy” was invented.

Another suggested that bringing up the idea of “reviews” was just another example of the president’s disinformation tactics.

Finally, there was the woman who answered Trump’s claim of “great reviews” with a devastating takedown of her own.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article said that the tweets came after the COVID-19 death toll in the U.S. had passed 100,000. That had not yet been officially reported as of Monday evening.

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus

 



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Why didn’t Peru’s strict measures stop the coronavirus?

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As of Monday, Peru had more than 119,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and 3,400 deaths — putting it second only to Brazil both in number of cases and deaths in Latin America.

The two countries had handled the epidemic entirely differently: While Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro downplayed the dangers posed by the coronavirus, Peru’s President Martin Vizcarra declared on March 15 a nationwide state of emergency that included mandatory self-quarantine, and shuttered the country’s borders.

But the virus surged all the same.

More than 85% of Peru’s ICU beds with ventilators are currently occupied, according to government figures, and overcrowding at hospitals is feared.

“This situation is not just a health emergency, but a health catastrophe, defined as a situation where the pandemic has overtaken the response capacity of the health sector,” Dr. Alfredo Celis of the Medical College of Peru told CNN en Español.

How did a country that responded assertively and seriously to the pandemic end up like this?

Needs vs. quarantine measures

The deep inequality in Peru is one reason, according to Dr. Elmer Huerta, a Peruvian doctor and contributor to CNN en Español. “What I have learned is that this virus lays bare the socio-economic conditions of a place,” he said.

Many of Peru’s poor have no choice but to venture outside their homes for work, food or even banking transactions.

For example, only 49% of Peruvian households own a refrigerator or freezer (61% in urban areas), according to the country’s 2017 Census. This translates to a need for many to visit markets daily for food because they can’t stock up, Huerta said.

“You’re supposed to avoid human contact in a society where one can’t stay at home,” Huerta said.

On April 14 — about a month after Peru enacted its mandatory stay-at-home policy and implemented a curfew — CNN affiliate TV Peru showed images outside of a market on the outskirts of Lima. Shoppers waited in line for hours and a large mass of people milled about. Most wore masks, but social distancing seemed impossible.

“We must endure (the crowds) because there is no other way,” one woman standing in line told TV Peru. “If not, we will not have food. We have nothing to eat, that’s why we have come here.”

On that day, the tally of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country was 10,303. Today, it is 10 times higher.

Unintended consequences

People have also ended up crowding at banks as they attempted to access coronavirus relief funds.

The government’s stimulus package to help millions of Peru’s most vulnerable families was a good idea, but its distribution was poorly designed, said Kristian Lopez Vargas, a Peruvian economist and assistant professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

In a report last year, the agency that regulates Peru’s banks reported that only about 38% of adults have a bank account. The lack of access to the financial system means a majority of aid recipients have to go in person to the banks to obtain their money.

“It was not hard to anticipate people’s behavior in their attempt to access this aid,” Lopez Vargas told CNN. “Instead, these policies caused unnecessary harm by inducing people to gather in large crowds in banks.”

Many Peruvians also live and work in ways that simply can’t be reconciled with social distancing, he pointed out. According to Lopez Vargas, more than 30% of households in Peru live in overcrowded conditions, with four or more people sleeping in the same room.

And more than 72% work in the informal economy, according to Peru’s National Institute of Statistics and Information. For those living day-to-day in the informal sector, earning an income oftentimes depends on going out to work and not self-isolating.

This, combined with the needs of millions to obtain food and other items from crowded markets, “was an explosive mix,” Lopez Vargas said.

What now?

On Friday, President Vizcarra extended the state of emergency until June 30, keeping in place the mandatory self-quarantine and curfews across the country. It was the fifth time the emergency measures have been extended. But this time, the extension was paired with authorization for certain businesses to re-open, including services like salons, food delivery and dentistry.

Peru’s priorities for enforcing health guidelines also appear to have evolved since the state of emergency was first declared. In early April, Vizcarra reported that during the first weeks of the stay-at-home mandate, as many as 3,000 people were detained for disobeying the measures on some days. On Monday, he announced that the priority will be on enforcing health protocols at the country’s markets.

One lesson learned from the pandemic response is that people must change certain “social behaviors that have done much damage,” he added.

“This kind of behavior is individualistic, selfish…ignoring what’s happening around us, and precisely what has brought this situation upon us, not just in Peru, but the whole world,” said Vizcarra.

But Huerta, the doctor, and Lopez Vargas, the economist, caution against placing too much blame on the people. The underlying problems that the pandemic has laid bare are not new.

“While it may seem like a mystery to some, it’s not,” Lopez Vargas said.

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Jimmy Cobb, Drummer On Miles Davis’ ‘Kind of Blue’ Album, Dead At 91

Jimmy Cobb, a percussionist and the last surviving member of Miles Davis’ 1959 “Kind of Blue” groundbreaking jazz album which transformed the genre and sparked several careers, died Sunday.

His wife, Eleana Tee Cobb, announced on Facebook that her husband died at his New York City home from lung cancer. He was 91.

Born in Washington, D.C., Cobb told The Associated Press in 2019 he listened to jazz albums and stayed up late to hear disc jockey Symphony Sid playing jazz in New York City before launching his professional career. He said it was saxaphonist Cannonball Adderley who recommended him to Davis, and he ended up playing on several Davis recordings.

But Cobb’s role as a drummer on the “Kind of Blue” jam session headed by Davis would forever change his career. That album also featured Adderley and John Coltrane.

The album, released on Aug. 17, 1959, captured a moment when jazz was transforming from bebop to something newer, cooler and less structured.

The full takes of the songs were recorded only once, with one exception, Cobb said. “Freddie Freeloader” needed to be played twice because Davis didn’t like a chord change on the first attempt, he said.

Davis, who died in 1991, had some notes jotted down, but there weren’t pages of sheet music. It was up to the improvisers to fill the pages. “He’d say this is a ballad. I want it to sound like it’s floating. And I’d say, ‘OK,’ and that’s what it was,” Cobb recalled.

The album received plenty of acclaim at the time, yet the critics, the band and the studio couldn’t have known it would enjoy such longevity. He and his bandmates knew the album would be a hit but didn’t realize at the time how iconic it would become.

“We knew it was pretty damned good,” Cobb joked.

It has sold more than 4 million copies and remains the best selling jazz album of all time. It also served as a protest album for African American men who looked to Davis and the jazz musicians to break stereotypes about jazz and black humanity.

Cobb would also work with such artists as Dinah Washington, Pearl Bailey, Clark Terry, Dizzy Gillespie, Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, Wynton Kelly and Stan Getz. He’d also release a number of albums on his own.

He performed well into his late 80s and played in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 2017, as part of the New Mexico Jazz Festival. Jazz fans from throughout the American Southwest came to pay their respects in what many felt was a goodbye.

This story corrects a previous version that misspelled the name of Miles Davis.

Associated Press writer David Sharp contributed to this piece from Portland, Maine.

Contreras reported from Albuquerque, New Mexico. He is a member of The Associated Press’ race and ethnicity team. Follow him on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/russcontreras



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Memorial Day Observances Smaller, More Subdued During Pandemic

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Americans settled for small processions and online tributes instead of parades Monday as they observed Memorial Day in the shadow of the pandemic, which forced communities to honor the nation’s military dead with modest, more subdued ceremonies that also remembered those lost to the coronavirus.

On the weekend that marked the unofficial start of summer, authorities warned people heading to beaches, parks or backyard barbecues to heed social-distancing rules to avoid a resurgence of the disease that has infected 5.4 million people worldwide and killed over 345,000, including nearly 100,000 Americans, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Memorial Day commemorations were canceled or toned down across the country. Veterans, along with nursing home residents, have made up a significant portion of those who died in the U.S. outbreak.

Frank Groblebe and his wife placed lilacs on several graves at Mountview Cemetery in Billings, Montana, including those of his mother and father, who served in the Philippines as a Navy Seabee during World War II. Groblebe said he approved of plans to curtail the ceremony, which included a motorcycle procession and moments of quiet remembrance.

“This is our freedom. This is our history. It’s what they fought for,” Groblebe said, briefly choking up with tears. “Anything that shows respect for it is all right with me.”

Sharon Oakland placed mums on the grave of her father, also a Navy veteran in World War II. She watched from a distance as the motorcycles rolled by. “What they’ve done is remarkable given what’s going on with the virus,” she said.

The day looked different across the U.S. The 37,000 American flags traditionally placed on the Boston Common to honor Massachusetts military members who died in service were replaced with just 1,000 flags, to limit volunteers and onlookers. In Minneapolis, several bagpipers and drummers lined up outside the Minnesota Veterans Home and played as a parade of cars drove past.

The city of Woodstock, Georgia, held its ceremony online. American Legion Post 316 Commander Julian Windham recognized service members who helped in the global fight against COVID-19.

“Even when the enemy is an invisible virus or a microscopic germ, the sacrifices made are just as meaningful,” Windham said. The ceremony, which included readings, vocal performances and gunshots from a ceremonial rifle team, were filmed over a series of days last week and edited together, Windham said.

In Chicago, a neighborhood group that’s been holding a parade for more than a half century also moved its event online, with video clips from previous years and messages from special guests, including veterans and Mayor Lori Lightfoot. In the suburb of Lisle, a convoy of vehicles from fire departments and VFW posts drove silently through village streets.

Fallen military members were honored in New York City with car convoys and small ceremonies.

“It’s something we’re upset about, but we understand,” said Raymond Aalbue, chairman of the United Military Veterans of Kings County, which usually puts on a parade in Brooklyn. There’s “no reason to put anybody in harm’s way,” he said, adding “it’s really cutting quick to the heart of all the veterans.”

On Long Island, a small group of veterans saluted, wearing masks and spaced several feet apart, as a parade of cars passed beneath a large American flag.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo joined a private ceremony at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in Manhattan, with both the sacrifices of military members and the challenge of the coronavirus on his mind.

“Over 100,000 Americans will lose their lives to this COVID virus. How do we honor them? We honor them by growing stronger together,” he said.

“We want to make sure we remember them and thank our heroes today.”

Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden made his first in-person appearance in more than two months by laying a wreath at a veterans park near his Delaware home. He wore a face mask as he and his wife bowed their heads in silence. He saluted and could be heard saying “Never forget.”

Biden told reporters, “I feel great to be out here.” He also yelled to a group standing nearby, “Thank you for your service.”

After two days of playing golf, President Donald Trump visited Arlington National Cemetery, where he laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, which overlooks rolling hills dotted with white tombstones. He later spoke at Baltimore’s historic Fort McHenry, noting that tens of thousands of service members and national guard personnel are currently “on the front lines of our war against this terrible virus.”

Trump said brave warriors from the nation’s past have shown that “in America, we are the captains of our own fate.”

Tens of thousands of Americans still headed outdoors over the weekend to shake off some pandemic restrictions. Missouri’s health director issued a dire warning Monday after photos and video showed weekend revelers partying close together. One video posted on social media showed a crammed pool at Lake of the Ozarks. Many of those seen in the video were young people, who may not experience symptoms.

“When they then carry the virus and transmit it to a more vulnerable person, this is when we tend to see the long-lasting and tragic impact of these decisions that are being made,” said Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services Director Randall Williams. St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson called such high-risk behavior “irresponsible and dangerous.”

Forliti reported from Minneapolis. Associated Press writers Sara Burnett in Chicago and R.J. Rico in Atlanta also contributed to this report.



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