Domestic violence increases in France during COVID-19 lockdown
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PARIS. Secretary of State for Gender Equality, Marlène Schiappa, has revealed a dramatic increase in domestic violence cases since the lockdown started about two weeks ago. While domestic violence across France increased by “32% in one week”, in Paris it rose by as much as 36%.
On the day that President Emmanuel Macron announced sweeping plans to go into a 15-day period of enforced lockdown from Tuesday, concerns also arose as to the potential increase in cases of gender-based domestic violence, following a previous surge in China under similar conditions.
Another federal-state meeting. Germany’s federal government and heads of the country’s 16 federal states are set to meet again on Wednesday (1 April), a government spokesperson announced on Monday (30 March). While they intend to take stock of the current measures and assess how best to proceed, they will not advocate for the removal of restrictions, as the speed of the virus’ spread is still far too high to relax the restrictions, the spoksesperson confirmed.
Meanwhile, the country will go into an “unavoidable” recession, according to a report from the German Council of Economic Experts. The slump could reach up to 5.4%, which is just 0.3% short of the contraction in 2009 if restrictions last longer or production is further halted as a result of the crisis. If restrictions are lifted by mid-May, the economy would only shrink by 2.8%. (Sarah Lawton | EURACTIV.de)
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BRUSSELS
New government bonds. Belgium will borrow extra money to pay for its increased spending through government bonds, according to reports of the Belgian Debt Agency. Although the full sum is unknown, “the additional need runs into billions, that is clear”, Belgian media quoted director Jean Deboutte as saying.
Experts expect it would be a loan over five to seven years. Emergency economic measures are set to cost the federal government up to €10 billion, David Clarinval, federal minister for budget said last week, while fiscal measures could cost €4.5 billion, along with additional ones to support the unemployed and self-employed. (Alexandra Brzozowski | EURACTIV.com)
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VIENNA
Austria tightens measures restricting social life. Chancellor Sebastian Kurz announced new and stricter measures to combat the spread of coronavirus on Monday. In supermarkets, shoppers will be obliged to wear protective mouth-nose-masks (as opposed to medical-quality masks used by doctors) which will be distributed at the shops’ entrances by Wednesday at the latest. EURACTIV’s Philipp Grüll has more.
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