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When Europe Supplied Black Composers an Ear

Running the festival was not an easy task. It involved translating dozen of black American art songs from English into German. In addition, historical negligence shaped which scores and voices the orchestra and singers were able to find. “This music has been forgotten,” said conductor Roderick Cox of William Dawson’s “Negro Folk Symphony”. “It was neglected; They couldn’t get access to this music through the publishers; the parts were in ruins. “

In fact, Dawson’s Symphony – once hailed as a brilliant success – rested in the United States for decades. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the only recent recording of it was made in Vienna.

But praising Europe for providing a platform for the music of black American composers leaves out an important part of the story. White European support and advocacy for black American musicians has often come at the expense of their own black populations. As many black European intellectuals and activists have pointed out, do Europeans know the names of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Trayvon Martin, but do they know the names of Oury Jalloh, Stephen Lawrence and Jerry Masslo?

Renowned music institutes such as Darmstadt in Germany have rarely invited black composers to join their international communities, or given German-based black composers such as Robert Owens and Benjamin Patterson their rights. In the city of Hamburg with a black population from the 19th summer were almost entirely white.

Europe has been lax in promoting its own historical black composers and musicians such as George Bridgetower, Amanda Aldridge, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, and Avril Coleridge-Taylor. Many of the recent high profile performances by black European performers and composers can be attributed more to the Chineke Orchestra in England – Europe’s first ensemble with a majority of colored musicians – than to white European music institutions. Other black European composers such as Werner Jaegerhuber, a Haitian-German composer who lived in Germany from 1915 until his escape from the Nazis in 1937, have not yet received significant European attention.

Recognizing black composers on every stage puts pressure on institutions to grapple with their racist past and envision a better future. Nearly a century apart, Rudolph Dunbar’s performance of Still’s Afro-American Symphony and Roderick Cox’s of Dawson’s Negro Folk Symphony suggest that efforts to promote racial justice go hand in hand with commitment to the power of music to use. Performing the music of black composers is not easy or just an opportunity to correct historical errors. It should also not be considered equivalent to eating your proverbial broccoli. Rather, it is an invitation to the most exquisite dishes. Fighting for the music of black composers means fighting for a better world.

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World News

Europe Reopened to People. Why, It Asks, Hasn’t the U.S. Reciprocated?

MADRID — He was vaccinated in April, tested negative for the coronavirus and believed he was exempt from travel restrictions.

But on a stopover in Amsterdam in late May, Peter Fuchs, 87, was told he could not board his New York-bound flight to attend his great-granddaughter’s christening. The reason: As a European citizen, he was not allowed to enter the United States.

“I felt helpless and broken down,” Mr. Fuchs said in an email from his nursing home apartment in Hanover, Germany.

In June, as the United States made headway in its vaccination campaign, European Union leaders recommended that member countries reopen their borders to Americans, a significant gesture meant to signal what they hoped would be the beginning of the pandemic’s end. They expected to be repaid in kind.

That the United States remains largely closed has dismayed Europeans and frustrated their leaders, who are demanding that Europe’s decision to open its borders be reciprocated.

“We insist comparable rules be applied to arrivals in both directions,” Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, said last week at a news conference. Officials with the bloc have even suggested reimposing travel restrictions against American travelers, though a quick change is not expected since many countries are reluctant to risk further ruin to summer tourism.

For some European families, the continued ban has compounded one of the deepest sorrows of the pandemic — separation itself — as loved ones become ill across closed borders and family elders grow fearful they may never see their loved ones again.

Unmarried partners with different passports have struggled to keep relationships afloat, giving rise to the popular Twitter hashtag #loveisnottourism. Europeans offered jobs in the United States still do not know whether they should accept them.

“Now that we have vaccines, at least let the vaccinated people come,” said Michele Kastelein, a dual French-American citizen living in Portola Valley, Calif. Her French brother Maurice had to abandon plans to attend her son’s wedding this month, despite hopes that the ban would be lifted by now for Europeans like him who are vaccinated.

The European travel ban dates to the start of the pandemic. President Donald J. Trump removed the restrictions in the final days of his term, but President Biden reinstated them shortly after taking office.

The White House, however, has offered little explanation on why the restrictions remain — even though some countries with higher infection and lower vaccination rates face no similar ban. At a news conference last week, Jen Psaki, the White House spokeswoman, cited the advice of medical experts and continued concerns about the Delta variant.

Under the current rules, virtually all residents of Europe’s Schengen Area — the passport-free zone that includes 26 countries plus other entities — as well as those living in Britain and Ireland are still barred from traveling to the United States.

Five other countries under the ban include ones with high infection rates, like Iran, South Africa, Brazil and India, but also China, where rates of spread have been far lower than those in the United States for months.

The travel ban exempts some people, among them American citizens, permanent U.S. residents and some family members of U.S. citizens, provided the American is under 21.

Updated 

Aug. 9, 2021, 9:16 p.m. ET

People from the prohibited countries can still enter the United States if they spend the 14 days before their arrival in a country that is not on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s list.

This last proviso led Shelley Murray, an American strength and conditioning coach, and her partner, Viktor Pesta, a mixed martial arts athlete from the Czech Republic, into an odyssey that spanned not just their native countries, but also Turkey and the Dominican Republic.

The two had moved into a home in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., shortly before the pandemic when Mr. Pesta was called to a coaching assignment in the Czech Republic. The European Union and the United States banned travel in both directions soon after, and the two were separated for six months, Ms. Murray said.

She was the first to leave her country, last August, after the Czech Republic created a so-called sweetheart exception that allowed Americans to visit unwed partners. But when Mr. Pesta wanted to return to the United States last October, he had to spend two weeks in Turkey — a country not on the C.D.C.’s prohibited list — so he would be allowed to enter.

This spring, shortly after Mr. Pesta was vaccinated in the United States, he traveled back to the Czech Republic for a mixed martial arts fight. When he wished to return to Florida this summer, the couple went to the Dominican Republic to allow for Mr. Pesta’s re-entry, a visit that stretched on for seven weeks because of visa delays.

Ms. Murray said her chief frustration was that American rules led the couple to stay in countries where infection rates were higher than in much of Europe, supposedly as a precaution against infected travelers.

“It was kind of nonsensical to us,” she said.

In another part of Fort Lauderdale sits the empty two-bedroom apartment of Elisabeth Haselbach, a Swiss citizen who bought it four years ago as an investment and vacation property.

Understand the State of Vaccine Mandates in the U.S.

But Ms. Haselbach has not been able to see her home since before the pandemic. She continues to pay taxes and condominium fees, but is worried because she has been unable to reinforce her home for the hurricane season, which lasts from June through November.

She said the predicament left her stunned: She found Mr. Trump’s behavior on the international stage unreasonable, but she did not expect to think the same of Mr. Biden on the closed borders.

“I was the No. 1 fan of the Democrats,” she said.

Frustration with the ban led Marius Van Der Veeken, a retired finance professional in the Netherlands, to write to Mr. Biden, saying he wanted to see his family in Michigan.

Mr. Van Der Veeken, 64, and his wife, Anne-Mieke, 61, had just gotten to know their grandchildren, now 3 and 4, before the pandemic prevented travel. Having received the AstraZeneca vaccine in March, they had believed they would soon have a chance to see the children, along with their daughter and son-in-law. Instead, they continue to meet each Sunday by video call.

Their grandchildren recognize them — calling them Opa and Oma, grandpa and grandma in Dutch — but Mr. Van Der Veeken worries that long-distance calls are not enough and that he is losing precious years.

“It’s important now to be building a relationship with them,” he said. “My big argument is that the travel restrictions should make a difference between family connections and tourists.”

Mr. Fuchs, the retiree from Germany, had similar feelings when he was blocked from his flight in May to attend the christening of his great-granddaughter, his first.

His daughter Natascha Sabert, an American citizen, said she had been told mistakenly by U.S. consular officials that he was eligible to enter the country as her father. But when he reached the airport in Amsterdam, he was told that he did not qualify because his daughter was over 21.

Ms. Sabert worried that her father, who is hard of hearing, would not be able to make it back to Germany that night from Amsterdam. Airport officials told her there were no more flights to Hanover that day, she said.

“I said, ‘You can’t push him in a wheelchair somewhere in the airport in the corner and just leave him there,’” she recalled.

Eventually, Mr. Fuchs was put on a flight to Hamburg, where a relative helped him onto a train to Hanover.

The experience has left Ms. Sabert fearful of asking her father to try to make the trip again. But she also feels time is running out and wants the chance for the family to reunite.

“It’s about these last moments before we say goodbye,” she said.

Monika Pronczukcontributed reporting from Brussels.

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World News

In Photographs: Fires Ravage Southern Europe

ATHENS – House and car shells burned out by flames. Forests reduced to ashes. Tourists evacuated by boat from once idyllic beaches where the sky is full of smoke. While southern Europe is grappling with one of the worst heat waves in decades, deadly forest fires have struck parts of the region, stalling a newly opened tourism industry and enforcing mass evacuations.

The raging fires drove residents in villages across mainland Greece and the islands, as well as neighboring Turkey, out of their homes, forcing tourists to abandon beach destinations across the region.

Fires tormented the southern coast of Turkey for a ninth day on Thursday, forcing thousands of people to evacuate overnight by land and sea. A video broadcast on Turkish television showed uncontrollable flames that suddenly changed direction in strong winds and trapped people.

Critics have attacked President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for the government’s handling of the deadly disaster.

Hundreds of square kilometers of forest burned when more than 180 fires blazed across the country. At least eight people died, hundreds were injured and dozen lost their homes.

In Mugla, a Turkish province full of farmland popular with tourists, residents angry about the uncontrolled fires blocked roads and stopped cars they believed were suspicious.

“Maybe they burned the forest,” shouted Muharrem Duygu, a Mugla resident who stopped a car in a video posted on Twitter. “My forest is on fire right now.”

Firefighters were able to control a fire approaching a power plant in Milas after working the night to rescue the facility. Trees on the power plant site were burned, but the main site was not seriously damaged, officials said.

In ancient Olympia, the birthplace of the Olympic Games in southern Greece, local authorities and army personnel dug fire lines around the archaeological site to keep the flames at bay while firefighters fought the flames through the night.

Extreme weather

Updated

Aug 5, 2021, 8:24 p.m. ET

After visiting the site on Thursday, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said the country was facing “an unprecedented environmental crisis”.

“Unfortunately, despite the fact that we have more air support per capita than any other country, it is impossible for these aircraft to be available across the country at any one time,” he said. He added that he fully understood “the anger, anger and despair of people who saw their property destroyed”.

The Greek government stepped up its military engagement in fighting the fires on Thursday as dozens of flames continued to burn across the country, fueled by a record-breaking heat wave that struck the region.

A major fire that broke out north of Athens on Tuesday destroyed dozen of houses and thousands of acres of forest. It had been partially contained but flared up again later that day.

Tourists visiting the capital were faced with a thick curtain of smoke that hung over the city’s iconic landmarks. A short distance north, the residents were driven from their homes. Some tried unsuccessfully to use hoses to prevent the flames from engulfing their property when a fire flared up again north of Athens on Thursday afternoon and spread quickly, leading to further evacuations – including in Malakasa, a state camp the asylum seeker would be evacuated to other facilities on the instructions of the civil protection authorities, according to the Greek Ministry of Migration.

On Thursday, Vasilis Vathrakoyiannis, a fire department spokesman, said 120 fires were burning across the country, the largest and most worrying being in ancient Olympia and the island of Evia.

On Wednesday afternoon, the Greek coast guard evacuated dozens of people from the island’s coastal village of Rovies after a huge fire hit a nearby pine forest. Residents of several villages on the island were forced to leave their homes and local authorities and the army dug fire lines to protect a monastery. The local church in the village of Kechries rang its bells early Thursday morning to tell residents to flee.

In photos of the island, the sun was barely visible through the thick smoke that hung over the houses on the cliffs.

Greek TV channels switched between video recordings of the fires in northern Athens, Euboea and the Peloponnese peninsula, bringing back memories of the summer of 2007 when Greece fought several major fires across the country, killing large numbers of people.

While scientists have not yet had time to assess the relationship between the current wave of extreme temperatures and global warming, this fits in with a general trend that has seen climate change in extreme weather conditions in Europe. Research has shown that climate change has been a major worsening factor in major heat waves across Europe in recent summers.

Efthymis Lekkas, professor of natural disaster management at the University of Athens, warned of “an ongoing nightmare in August” and urged the authorities to be prepared for possible flooding after large areas of forest have been destroyed.

Greece’s General Secretariat for Civil Protection warned on Friday of an “extreme” fire hazard as strong winds are expected to make the situation worse.

Niki Kitsantonis reported from Athens and Megan Specia from New York.

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World News

Transport disaster strikes Black Friday purchasing amid Europe, China floods

TOPSHOT – The aerial photo shows an area in the Blessem district of Erftstadt on July 16, 2021, which was completely destroyed by the flooding.

SEBASTIEN BOZON | AFP | Getty Images

The 2021 Christmas shopping season could be impacted by out of stock and shipping delays as recent floods in Europe and China exacerbate already tight global supply chains.

Western Europe and the Chinese province of Henan – an important transport hub and headquarters of several large companies – are grappling with the aftermath of devastating floods.

The disasters damaged railways in both regions, which are used to deliver goods and raw materials. Water entered industrial areas and damaged facilities, machinery and warehouses, supply chain industry companies told CNBC.

“Black Friday and the holiday season for which products (and raw materials) are staged will have the brunt of the impact,” Pawan Joshi, executive vice president of supply chain software company E2open, told CNBC in an email.

“Consumer electronics, dorm furniture, clothing and appliances will all continue to be in short supply as shopping starts early in school and enters the main Christmas shopping season,” he said.

Delays in the distribution of raw materials needed to manufacture goods will have a cascading effect and disrupt supply chains “for weeks and months,” Joshi said.

The flood has the potential to take another blow to the auto industry, which is already suffering from a semiconductor shortage.

Pawan Joshi

Executive Vice President, supply chain software company E2open

Several companies, including Germany’s largest steel manufacturer Thyssenkrupp, have declared force majeure. A force majeure event occurs when unforeseeable circumstances, such as natural disasters, prevent a party from fulfilling its contractual obligations and release it from sanctions.

Some of the industries hardest hit by the floods include automobiles, technology and electronics, according to those CNBC spoke to.

Car production started again after lack of chips

Auto production is likely to be affected by production delays as many of the world’s largest automakers and their suppliers are based in the flood-ravaged regions.

“The flood has the potential to take another blow to the auto industry, which is already suffering from a semiconductor shortage,” said Pawan.

Production facilities in Germany, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Belgium are expected to bear the brunt of the flood damage, supply chain risk management company Everstream told CNBC via email. Many suppliers that provide specialty parts for the automotive, technology and aerospace industries are based there, said Shehrina Kamal, vice president of Intelligence Solutions at Everstream.

“When the floods receded, most major highways and roads were expected to be cleared this past weekend,” she said.

“Given that some companies have issued profit warnings and even declared acts of God, the effects of the flood are likely to drag on through supply chains for several weeks,” concluded Kamal.

Zurich-based company Klingelnberg, which makes transmission components, warned that the damage to its Hückeswagen plant in Germany could affect its sales targets for 2021.

Disruption of copper is bad news for electronics

The floods could also disrupt supplies of copper, which is used in many products from electronics to electric vehicles.

Flood-hit Henan Province in China is a major center of copper production, said Vivek Dhar, a commodities analyst with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Copper prices rose sharply last week on delivery concerns, he said, as Henan has seen strong growth in copper smelting in recent years.

“Hopes for copper demand are linked to the rebuilding of damaged infrastructure in central China. China’s electricity sector is a particularly strong driver of copper demand,” Dhar wrote in a note last week.

In Europe, Aurubis GmbH – a provider of high-precision copper wires for the electronics and electrical appliance industries – declared force majeure in the case of deliveries after extensive floods in their plant, according to Everstream Analytics.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

Meanwhile, in Henan’s capital, Zhengzhou, the disruption could hit a wide range of industries, from automotive to pharmaceuticals to biotechnology, said Ryan Seah, APAC intelligence analyst at Everstream.

“Zhengzhou is a major transportation hub and one of the most important cities in China along the Belt and Road Initiative,” said Seah, referring to China’s gigantic infrastructure plan that spans several countries and continents. He added that the city is home to 91 China-listed companies and a variety of sectors.

Zhengzhou is also home to a large factory operated by Hon Hai Precision Industry, also known as Foxconn. It is the world’s largest assembly plant for Apple’s iPhones. Foxconn previously told CNBC that it had “activated an emergency plan for flood control measures at this location.”

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World News

Floods in Europe and China disrupt international delivery, provide chains

The floods in China and Europe are another “body blow” for global supply chains, the CEO of a shipping company told CNBC on Monday.

“Seldom goes a week without something new,” says Tim Huxley, CEO of Mandarin Shipping.

Shipping has already experienced massive disruptions this year. As parts of the world recovered from the pandemic, increased spending resulted in a shortage of containers, causing delays and driving up prices.

In April one of the largest container ships in the world got wedged in the Suez Canal and stopped traffic for almost a week. The waterway is one of the busiest in the world, carrying about 12% of all trade.

In June, a spike in COVID cases in southern China caused further delays in the region’s ports, pushing shipping prices soaring again.

“Broken railway connections” due to floods in Europe

Heavy rains and floods have devastated parts of Western Europe. Some of the worst floods occurred in Germany and Belgium. Parts of Switzerland, Luxembourg and the Netherlands are also affected.

“This will really disrupt the supply chain because the rail links have all been cut,” Huxley told CNBC’s Squawk Box Asia.

These include railways from the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the German ports of Rotterdam and Hamburg, which are “seriously disrupted”.

“And that will delay freight movements back and forth,” he said. “This is going to really mess up the industry.”

Huxley pointed to Thyssenkrupp and stated that the German steel giant could not get any raw materials because of the flooding.

“That will ultimately affect industries like automotive, home appliances and the like,” he said.

S&P Global Platts reported, citing a customer letter, that Thyssenkrupp had declared force majeure on July 16. A force majeure event occurs when unforeseeable circumstances, such as natural disasters, prevent a party from fulfilling its contractual obligations and release it from sanctions.

A source at the company’s plants told S&P Global Platts that parts of the railroad in Hagen were “missing”, adding that it was even more difficult than before to get trucks for delivery. Hagen is a city in western Germany that has been hardest hit by the floods.

Floods in inland Henan cut the supply of wheat and coal

The disruption caused by the floods in China’s Henan Province, meanwhile, is made worse by the province’s being inland, Huxley said.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

The interruption of the railway will again have “great effects”, he said.

“Of course that will affect the shipping, that will increase the shipping costs,” said Huxley.

The distribution of wheat and coal is affected, said Huxley, who pointed out that Henan is China’s “bread basket” and has produced 38 million tons of wheat this summer.

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World News

Tons of Lacking and Scores Useless as Raging Floods Strike Western Europe

BERLIN – After a day of frantic rescue efforts and orders to evacuate cities that were quickly filling with water released from violent storms, German authorities said late Thursday that after confirming numerous deaths, they were unable, at least 1,300 people to explain.

That staggering number was announced after rapidly flowing water from swollen rivers poured through towns and villages in two western German states, where news outlets said more than 80 people had died and other fatalities were expected in the hardest-hit regions.

With communication severely hampered, the authorities hoped the missing people would be safe, if out of reach. But the storms and floods have already proven deadly.

At least 11 other people are believed to have died in Belgium, according to the authorities, who also ordered residents of downtown Liege to evacuate when the Meuse, which flows through the center, overflowed.

The storms and the resulting floods have also struck the neighboring countries of Switzerland, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, as a slowly moving weather system threatened to bring even more rain to the flooded region overnight and until Friday.

The devastation caused by the storm came just days after the European Union announced an ambitious plan to move away from fossil fuels over the next nine years in order to make the 27-country bloc climate-neutral by 2050. Early on, politicians drew parallels between floods and the effects of climate change.

But the immediate focus on Thursday remained the rescue effort, with hundreds of firefighters, rescue workers and soldiers working to rescue people from the upper floors and roofs of their homes, filling sandbags to contain rising waters and looking for missing people.

One of the hardest hit regions was the German district of Ahrweiler, where flash floods flooded the village of Schuld, washed away six houses and left several more shortly before the collapse. At least 50 people died in the Ahrweiler district, the police said.

With so many missing, the district authority said late Thursday that the death toll is expected to rise. “In view of the complexity of the amount of damage, a final assessment of the situation is currently not possible,” it said in a press release.

“We do not have exact death numbers, but we can say that we have many people who fell victim to this flood,” said Armin Laschet, the governor of North Rhine-Westphalia, one of the most severely affected federal states in Germany.

“Many people lost everything they owned after the mud flowed into their homes,” said Laschet, who will replace Angela Merkel as Chancellor in the federal elections on September 26th.

The floods in North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate were among the worst in decades, after days of continuous rain sank more water than the soil and sewer system could absorb.

Police asked people to upload pictures of the floods to help them find it.

The police in North Rhine-Westphalia reported at least 30 deaths, with at least 15 people being known in the Euskirchen district south of Düsseldorf. Many others were still saved, although some villages remained inaccessible.

Ms. Merkel, who was visiting Washington on Thursday, expressed her condolences to the missing and thanked the thousands of helpers. She has promised the federal government to support the affected regions.

“Whatever is possible, we will do wherever we can,” she said, adding that Germany had received offers of help from its European partners.

Hundreds of firefighters worked all night to evacuate the stranded people. In Altena, North Rhine-Westphalia, two firefighters were killed while rescuing people, the police said.

“The water still flows knee-high through the streets, parked cars are thrown to the side, garbage and rubble pile up on the sides,” said Alexander Bange, the district spokesman for the Märkisches Land North Rhine-Westphalia news agency DPA

Today’s Best Reader Comments

    • Floods in Germany and other parts of Western Europe cause at least 40 deaths: “I live in the upper Meuse valley in Belgium. After the rains yesterday and tonight, this morning masses of water tumbled down the hills in many parts of the valley. Roads were impassable. I had never seen that before; and we are not among the hardest hit places. ”Yves C., Belgium.
    • Tech workers swear by San Francisco. Now they come back .: “We need people who are committed to San Francisco and call it home. Not just a place for tech workers who commute to Silicon Valley mornings and evenings and clog our streets with huge transport buses. ”Gary, San Francisco.
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“It’s really very depressing here,” he said.

Dozens of communities remained without electricity, while some villages were completely cut off, the police said. Telephone and cellular networks were also down, making it difficult for the authorities to track down the missing persons.

Belgium and the Netherlands also saw significant flooding when the weather system took hold in the region. According to the public broadcaster RTBF, at least two people were killed in the floods in the province of Liège in Belgium.

As the Meuse continued to reach dangerous proportions, the regional authorities asked the people of the city to evacuate and, if this was not possible, to take shelter on the upper floors of the buildings. All shops were closed and tourists were advised to leave.

The Belgian Defense Force said it was using helicopters and personnel to help with rescue and salvage work, while reports say the river is expected to rise several meters and endanger a dam.

In the Netherlands, according to the Dutch news agency NU.nl, soldiers were sent to the province of Limburg for evacuation, where at least one nursing home had to be evacuated.

Intense rain in Switzerland caused the country’s weather service to warn on Thursday that the floods would worsen in the coming days. On Lake Biel, Lake Thun and Lake Lucerne there is a high risk of flooding and the potential for landslides has been pointed out.

The chairman of Friends of the Earth Germany in North Rhine-Westphalia combined the severe flooding in the region with a failed policy of the state legislature. The effects of climate change are one of the issues that were hotly debated in Germany ahead of the September elections, in which the Greens are running for second place behind the conservative Christian Democrats led by Mr Laschet.

“The catastrophic consequences of the heavy rainfalls of the last few days are mostly homemade,” said Holger Sticht, who heads the regional chapter and made lawmakers and industry responsible for building in floodplains and forests. “We urgently need to change course.”

Megan Specia contributed to the coverage.

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Health

Europe struggles to interrupt freed from Covid restrictions as delta variant surges

People celebrated the end of the coronavirus curfew in Barcelona, Spain, on May 9, 2021. Now, Catalonia is reimposing restrictions amid a surge in Covid cases.

NurPhoto | NurPhoto | Getty Images

LONDON — Europe is struggling to contain a surge in Covid-19 cases caused by the delta variant, but while several countries reimpose measures to control the spread, the U.K. is taking the plunge and lifting restrictions.

From residual vaccine skepticism in some countries, to surges in infections linked to nightlife resuming, Europe is having to contend with competing needs: the reopening of crucial economic sectors this summer, while at the same time, curbing surging cases.

It’s not an easy balance to strike and, erring on the side of caution, a number of countries – including France, the Netherlands, Greece and Spain – announced new restrictions on Monday in a bid to curb the rise in infections, particularly among younger people who are the last in the queue to be vaccinated against Covid.

Mandatory vaccines?

In France, President Emmanuel Macron announced that for health and care workers, vaccines would be mandatory, and that a “health pass” (an app showing one’s vaccination status or recent negative test) would soon be required to access culture or leisure venues of a larger capacity. From August, the pass will be mandatory to access cafes, restaurants, malls, planes and trains in France. Lastly, in a bid to encourage vaccination take-up, PCR tests will stop being free from the fall unless they’re part of a prescription.

“If we do not act today, the number of cases will continue to rise sharply, and will inevitably lead to increased hospitalizations from the month of August,” Macron told the public in a televised address.

Similarly, Greece’s Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis also gave a televised address Monday in which he announced that Covid shots would be mandatory for nursing home and healthcare workers and that only vaccinated people will be allowed indoors in bars, cinemas, theaters and enclosed spaces.

Greece, like France, has struggled to encourage vaccine take up among more skeptical members of the public.

Imploring people to take up Covid shots, Mitsotakis said: “The country will not be shut down again by the attitude of some. It will give freedom to many. And protection for all. Because it is not Greece that is in danger, but the unvaccinated Greeks.”

Danny Altmann, professor of immunology at Imperial College London, told CNBC Tuesday that the divergent approaches showed just how nuanced the issue was.

“[It illustrates] how difficult it is and hard for any policy makers and scientists to make assertions against such a formidable and unpredictable foe,” he said. “We make predictions at our peril.”

Nightlife

The highly-transmissible delta variant of the coronavirus is reeking particular havoc among Europe’s younger populations as economies had started to allow their nightlife leisure venues to reopen, some after many months of closure. Vaccination rates among younger people lag in the region, however, with many only just being invited to receive their first dose.

While countries like France and Greece are still struggling to convince everyone to get the vaccine, other countries are rushing to administer shots to younger people, seen as both vectors of the virus through socializing, and more vulnerable given their partial or unvaccinated status.

A study in the U.K. in May found that two doses of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or AstraZeneca-University of Oxford vaccine give effective protection against the delta Covid variant, first discovered in India. Having just one dose, or being unvaccinated, makes individuals far more vulnerable to infection, however.

Rising Covid infections saw Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte admit on Monday that Covid restrictions had been lifted too soon at the end of June. On Monday, 8,522 new Covid cases were confirmed and on Saturday, the country reported its highest number of cases since Christmas.

Rutte’s comments came after the government conceded it was caught off-guard by the rising infection rate. It announced Friday that it would have to reimpose rules on bars and restaurants and close nightclubs, just days after they were reopened, in a bid to curb the spread among younger people.

Spain has also had to backtrack on the lifting of measures. On Monday, officials said the country’s two-week Covid-19 contagion rate was still rising, more than tripling in two weeks, Reuters reported. However, health emergency chief Fernando Simon said the pace of increase had reduced in recent days and the latest wave could be nearing its peak.

Nonetheless, new restrictions were announced in Catalonia and Valencia last week, including the closure of most night-time venues, as well as limits on social gatherings. In Valencia, the regional government asked its court to authorize a curfew on towns with more than 5,000 inhabitants that are considered high-risk, including on its capital Valencia and tourist favorite Benicassim.

For its part, Germany is seeing a slow rise (albeit from a low level) in Covid infections as many parts of the country relax restrictions.

There is a reluctance among officials (including Chancellor Angela Merkel and Foreign Minister Heiko Maas) to continue restrictions any longer than necessary. Nonetheless, the country is watching what’s happening in neighboring nations carefully. 

Since Sunday, Germany has imposed stricter restrictions on visitors from Spain who must now present proof of vaccination against Covid, proof of recent recovery from the virus or negative test results otherwise they must quarantine on arrival.

In sharp contrast, the UK

In sharp contrast to its continental cousins, the U.K. government confirmed on Monday that it will lift its remaining restrictions on July 19, despite its own infection rate remaining high, Over 34,000 new cases were reported in the U.K. Monday, marking the sixth consecutive day that Covid infections have been above 30,000.

Speaking in Parliament, Health Secretary Sajid Javid said that after monitoring the latest data, the government does not expect Covid infection rates to put unsustainable pressure on the National Health Service.

“We firmly believe that this is the right time to get our nation closer to normal life,” Javid said.

“Now, to those who say: Why take this step now? I say, if not now, when? There will never be a perfect time to take this step because we simply cannot eradicate this virus.”

Professor Altmann said the U.K.’s strategy was “a gamble,” but noted that, with its advanced vaccination program, the country was not in the same place as in the start of the year when the alpha variant emerged.

“Because of the vaccine we’re in a different place but let’s not construe that as meaning that the NHS isn’t under pressure or NHS doctors aren’t terrified of another wave. There are still dangers out there,” he said.

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Health

New Covid wave has arrived in Europe, WHO says

Scotland fans arrive at King’s Cross Station on June 17, 2021 in London, England. Soccer games, taking place during the Euros, have been blamed for a rise in Covid cases numbers.

Rob Pinney | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

A new wave of coronavirus cases could soon arrive in Europe, the World Health Organization warned Thursday, highlighting that a decline in the number of infections in the region has now come to an end.

“A 10-week decline in the number of Covid-19 cases in the 53 countries in the WHO European region has come to an end,” Hans Kluge, the WHO’s regional director for Europe, warned in a press briefing.

“Last week the number of cases rose by 10% driven by increased mixing, travel, gatherings and an easing of social restrictions,” he said.

The rise in cases comes against a backdrop of a “rapidly evolving situation,” Kluge said, given the new delta strain, which was dubbed a variant of concern by the WHO in May.

Millions remain unvaccinated in Europe, Kluge warned, with protection against the delta variant provided, for the most part, by having two doses of the Covid vaccines on offer. Kluge reiterated what the data has already shown, that the delta variant is far more transmissible than the alpha variant (which itself was more transmissible than previous strains).

Read more: The fast-spreading delta Covid variant could have different symptoms, experts say

“Delta overtakes alpha very quickly … and is already translating into increased hospitalizations and deaths,” Kluge said. He said the delta variant would be dominant in the WHO European region by August, while vaccinations would still not have caught up.

“By August, the WHO European Region will be ‘delta dominant,'” he noted, adding that 63% of people are still waiting for their first shot, while restrictions on public life are likely to be lifted by next month. The U.K., for example, which has a high vaccination rate but also a large number of cases caused by the delta variant, plans to end restrictions on July 19.

Read more: The Covid delta variant has ‘exploded’ in the UK — and it could be a blueprint for the U.S.

Kluge said that three conditions were now in place for “a new wave of excess hospitalizations and deaths” before the fall: new variants, a deficit in vaccine uptake and increased social mixing.

“There will be a new wave in the WHO European region unless we remain disciplined, and even more so when there is much less rules in place to follow,” he warned.

Medical staff member Mantra Nguyen installs a new oxygen mask for a patient in the Covid-19 intensive care unit (ICU) at the United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas.

Go Nakamura | Getty Images News | Getty Images.

Rise in infections

Kluge’s comments come amid a worrying rise in Covid infections across Europe despite efforts to curtail travel from high-risk regions.

Others are now following the U.K., with France, Germany, Italy, Portugal and Russia among a group of countries seeing an increasing number of Covid cases being caused by the delta variant, particularly among younger, unvaccinated or not yet fully vaccinated people.

Read more: Europe wants to stop the Covid delta variant. But experts say it may already be too late

Increased mixing, particularly given the delayed UEFA Euro 2020 soccer tournament that’s currently being held across the Continent, has not helped prevent the spread of the variant with gatherings and crowds as matches are being played.

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World News

A Tradition Struggle Between Hungary and Europe Escalates Over L.G.B.T. Invoice

BRUSSELS – A culture war between Hungary and the European Union escalated on Wednesday after a senior bloc official said she would use all her resources to thwart a new Hungarian law that critics say will target the LGBT community.

The law banning the representation or promotion of homosexuality in persons under the age of 18, an addition to the laws against pedophiles, was passed by the Hungarian parliament but has yet to be approved by the country’s president.

The law was sharply criticized on Wednesday by the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen.

“This Hungarian bill is a shame,” Ms. von der Leyen said in a statement. “This law clearly discriminates against people based on their sexual orientation. It contradicts the basic values ​​of the European Union: human dignity, equality and respect for human rights. “

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who defended the law, will come under pressure to withdraw it at a meeting of EU leaders on Thursday and Friday. It is the most recent confrontation between the European Union and Mr Orban, who describes himself as an advocate of an “illiberal democracy” that can sometimes run counter to the democratic values ​​of the bloc.

Ms von der Leyen described the European Union as a place “where you can be free who you are and love whoever you want” and added: “I will use all the powers of the Commission to protect the rights of all EU citizens are guaranteed. Whoever they are and wherever they live in the European Union. “

European ambassadors denounced the law on Wednesday in background information before the summit and said it violated the treaties of the European Union and crossed red lines. They expressed the hope that Mr Orban would withdraw from challenging Brussels in the way he has sometimes done in the past.

There is no quick fix if Hungary enforces the law, said the diplomats. But the Commission, which is officially the guardian of compliance with the Treaties, could refer Hungary to the European Court of Justice for a violation. The court could act relatively quickly if it wanted to, and Hungary has respected its decisions in the past.

The proposed law prohibits the distribution of homosexuality or gender affirmative surgery content to anyone under the age of 18 in school sex education programs, films, or advertisements. The government says it aims to protect children, but critics of the law say it combines homosexuality with pedophilia.

In a response on Wednesday, the Hungarian government issued a statement saying that Ms. von der Leyen’s statements were “based on false allegations” and reflected “a biased political opinion without a prior, impartial investigation”.

The statement continues: “The recently passed Hungarian law protects the rights of children, guarantees the rights of parents and does not apply to the rights of those over 18 with regard to sexual orientation, so it does not contain any discriminatory elements.”

Mr. Orban has portrayed himself as a defender of traditional Christian and national values ​​which he believes are being undermined by new concepts of sexual identity and behavior. His government is also under pressure for its performance, particularly its response to the coronavirus. As a result, Mr Orban has used such cultural issues to strengthen his conservative base ahead of next year’s elections.

A European Union official said Ms. von der Leyen wanted to send a political message to Hungarians and planned to speak privately with Mr. Orban about the issue.

On Tuesday, when European ministers met in Luxembourg, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said the law is only aimed at pedophiles and does not restrict adult sexual freedom. “The law protects children in such a way that it is the exclusive right of parents to educate their children about sexual orientation up to the age of 18,” he said. “This law says nothing about the sexual orientation of adults.”

Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands issued a joint statement condemning the law as a violation of the right to freedom of expression and as a “blatant form of discrimination based on sexual orientation”.

Ireland’s European Minister Thomas Byrne said: “I am very concerned – it is wrong what happened there.” Mr Byrne called it “a very, very dangerous moment for Hungary and also for the EU”.

Germany’s European Minister Michael Roth spoke of concerns that both Hungary and Poland are violating the rule of law by restricting the freedoms of the courts, academics and the media, as well as the rights of women, migrants and minorities.

“The European Union is not primarily a single market or a monetary union,” said Roth. “We are a community of values, these values ​​bind us all,” he said. “There must be no doubt that minorities, including sexual minorities, must be treated with respect.”

In an effort to get a public response, the city of Munich promised to light up its stadium in the rainbow colors of the Pride flag when Germany meets Hungary at the European Football Championship on Wednesday evening, but was refused by the game’s board. UEFA, who said the game must be kept free of politics.

The passionate soccer fan Orban has decided to cancel a visit to the Bavarian capital Munich for the game and instead to travel directly to Brussels, according to the German press agency dpa. The Hungarian government said it had never commented on Mr Orban’s “private program”.

Bavaria’s Prime Minister Markus Söder said Germans should “stand up against exclusion and discrimination,” while the Munich gay community said rainbow flags would be distributed to fans outside the stadium. A number of other stadiums in Germany should shine in rainbow colors.

Monika Pronzcuk contributed to the reporting.

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World News

America Might Be ‘Again’ in Europe, however How A lot Has Actually Modified?

FALMOUTH, England – Few pictures have captured the rupture of the transatlantic relationship better than that of President Donald J. Trump in 2018, arms crossed over his chest, as he saw Chancellor Angela Merkel and other frustrated leaders in their doomed endeavors the rescue of their summit resisted in Canada.

When the same leaders meet again in Cornwall, England on Friday, President Biden will reverse body language and replace stagnation with hug. But below the pictures, it’s not clear how much more open the United States will be to Europe than it was under Trump.

The transatlantic partnership has always been less reciprocal than its proponents like to claim – a marriage in which one partner, the United States, held the nuclear umbrella. Now that China is overtaking the Soviet Union as America’s arch-rival, the two sides are less united than they were during the Cold War, a geopolitical shift that exposes longstanding tensions between them.

At the reunification of the group of 7 industrialized nations on Friday, the question arises: will this expression of solidarity be more than a diplomatic pantomime – reassuring for Europeans who are traumatized by Trump’s “America First” policy, but have to disappoint them if they do realize that? does the United States go its own way under Mr Biden?

“America’s foreign policy has not fundamentally changed,” said Tom Tugendhat, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the UK Parliament. “It’s more collaborative and inclusive, but essentially it’s the same.”

“Like all leaders,” he added, “Biden puts his own country first. How he achieved this distracted many. “

Few Europeans question the sincerity of his efforts. Even more than his former boss, Barack Obama, Mr Biden is an Atlanticist who has been involved in European affairs from the Balkans to Belfast for decades.

On Thursday he and Prime Minister Boris Johnson presented a new Atlantic Charter based on the post-World War II draft signed by Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill.

In their first face-to-face meeting, Mr Biden and Mr Johnson each projected unity, each promising that his country would provide hundreds of millions of doses of vaccine to the developing world.

“I will not contradict the President in this or anything,” said Mr Johnson after Mr Biden said that both he and the newlywed Prime Minister “got married over our station.”

But the president has made China the guiding star of his foreign policy more aggressive. While American officials seek European support for these efforts, analysts said their expectations are limited given the commercial interests of Germany and other countries and the fact that Ms. Merkel and other Europeans showed no appetite for a new Cold War with Beijing.

“The Biden administration is determined to be courteous, determined to hear them, and then they will do whatever it was up to,” said Jeremy Shapiro, who worked at the State Department during the Obama administration and is now the European Council’s director of research for foreign relations in London.

“It doesn’t matter what US policy is towards Europe,” said Shapiro, summing up the prevailing opinion in the government. “We’re going to get the same amount out of them in China.”

The skepticism goes in both directions. Many European officials view Mr. Biden’s statement that “America is back” with a yellowish look, even if it is well-intentioned, in the face of the attack on the US Capitol and other threats to American democracy, not to mention Mr. Trump’s iron influence on the Republican Party.

“We live in an era of loss of confidence,” said Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German ambassador to the United States who chairs the Munich Security Conference, at which Biden was a regular speaker.

The Germans used to think that the transatlantic alliance didn’t care much whether the president was a Democrat or a Republican. Now Ischinger said: “For the first time in 70 years we are confronted with a new question: What happens when a resurrected Trump appears on the stage?”

White House officials have carefully choreographed Mr Biden’s trip to make it a summer festival of Alliance repair. But back in Washington, analysts say its staff moves show a marginalized role for Europe.

Biden in Europe

Updated

June 10, 2021, 8:08 p.m. ET

The White House has appointed prominent officials to coordinate Indo-Pacific and Middle Eastern politics in the National Security Council. There is no equivalent for Europe, nor has the government made diplomatic appointments such as a NATO ambassador or an envoy for Northern Ireland.

Mr Biden has welcomed the leaders of Japan and South Korea to the White House, but has not yet welcomed a major European leader.

On the eve of his visit to the UK, a senior American diplomat spoke bluntly to Johnson’s chief negotiator for Brexit about how the UK is handling tensions over post-Brexit trade deals in Northern Ireland.

There is a similar sense of limited expectations of Russia on both sides, even if Mr Biden meets President Vladimir V. Putin in Geneva next week. Washington-Moscow relations quickly deteriorated in the early months of the administration as the United States faced a Russian hacking operation, evidence of continued Russian interference in the 2020 presidential campaign, and Putin’s masses of troops on Russia’s border with Ukraine.

Russia’s arrest of opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny three days before Mr Biden’s inauguration set the tone for tensions to come.

Far from the “reset button” that Mr. Biden announced during his tenure as Vice President of Mr. Obama in 2009, his meeting with Mr. Putin appears to be primarily aimed at suppressing tensions with what is usually a divided Russia, so that both sides can use it avoid conflicts that could disrupt Mr Biden’s domestic political agenda.

Given what analysts are saying, Mr Putin’s calculation is that Russia will benefit from instability by sowing, they question how successful Mr Biden will be. Europe’s proximity to Russia – and Germany’s dependence on its natural gas – means that instability would pose a greater threat to Europe than it does to the United States.

“The problem with China is that it’s not our neighbor, it’s the US neighbor,” said Robin Niblett, director of Chatham House, a think tank in London. “Russia is Europe’s neighbor, and that reality complicates it, but only to the extent that the US wants to raise the temperature.”

The government’s zigzag course on Nord Stream 2, a gas pipeline that runs from Russia to Germany, has left some in Europe scratching their heads. Foreign Minister Antony J. Blinken said Mr. Biden publicly rejected the pipeline as a “bad idea”. But Mr Blinken recently declined to impose sanctions on those behind the $ 11 billion project, saying its conclusion was a “fait accompli”.

The reversal on the eve of Mr Biden’s European tour seemed designed to avoid a break with Germany, a critical ally. But in Britain, which is cracking down on Russia tougher than Germany, some officials said they were concerned that the decision would encourage Mr Putin and weaken Ukraine’s eastern border.

While the transatlantic differences with China are substantial, officials on both sides say Europe is gradually moving in Mr Biden’s direction. The European Parliament held up the ratification of a landmark investment treaty between Brussels and Beijing last month. This followed Beijing’s sanctioning of ten European Union politicians in what Europeans thought was an exaggerated reaction to the sanctions China had imposed for imprisoning Uighur minorities in Xinjiang.

The UK has leaned on the US on China, restricting Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei’s access to its 5G network. However, analysts warn that the change is motivated less by a change of heart about Beijing than by a desire not to get out of step with its most important ally after Brexit.

Some in Europe argue that Mr. Biden’s China policy is not fully worked out, noting that there was no shortage of diplomatic pantomime at Mr. Blinken’s stormy meeting with Chinese officials in Alaska in March.

Europe’s views could also develop further with the departure of Ms. Merkel, who firmly believes in a commitment to China, after 16 years in office and with French President Emmanuel Macron, who faces a difficult election campaign next year.

“The EU’s position on China has hardened over human rights issues,” said Simon Fraser, a former senior official in the UK Foreign Office. “I suspect there is a lot in common, even if different national interests come into play.”

Still, some Europeans have been put off by the way Mr Biden has portrayed competition with China in stark ideological terms – a fateful battle between democracy and autocracy in which the autocrats could win.

For leaders like Ms. Merkel, whose land sells millions of Volkswagen and BMW in China, the relationship is driven by trade and technology, not a possible military clash in the South China Sea.

“There’s a profound psychological problem at play,” said Thomas Wright, director of the Center on Europe and the United States at the Brookings Institution in Washington. “Some Europeans believe the US is too nostalgic for the Cold War and too ready to return.”

These are, of course, the early days of Mr Biden’s presidency. Analysts said he had recalibrated his message on China and Russia two months ago when he told Congress that Chinese President Xi Jinping believed that “democracy cannot compete with autocracies in the 21st century.”

Charles A. Kupchan, a Georgetown University professor who worked in the Obama administration on European affairs, said Mr Biden’s goal was to prevent the creation of a Sino-Russian bloc against the West. That requires the help of allies, which is why he predicted that Mr. Biden would not only listen to Europeans, but would also listen.

“This attempt to find geopolitical dividing lines will not find much support from the American allies,” said Kupchan.

Mr Biden appears to be sensitive to these concerns. In a column in the Washington Post last Sunday in which he outlined his travel destinations, he refrained from militant references to an autocratic China. Instead, he wrote about whether the United States and its allies might face a poor challenge: “Can democracies come together to deliver real results for our people in a rapidly changing world?”