BBC News - Coronavirus: Spanish PM promises to ease confinement of children
Their confinement will soon be eased, as the latest death toll from coronavirus shows a dip.
www.bbc.co.uk
Yay. Yay. And thrice
Yay.
@Rich., I cannot imagine how impossibly difficult the past few weeks have been.
On Sunday, following a government announcement, we told our kids, as the parents of the other 6.8 million kids (0-14yrs) here in Spain told theirs, that a week from now we'd be able to go out for a walk, just a short one, to get a bit of fresh air and some sun, to run for just a few minutes after six weeks of being locked in the house. You see, most people in Spain live in apartments. Most of us don't have gardens. We're lucky enough to have a balcony and a view, but many have nothing more than the view of an interior patio and the neighbours' washing. Adults of course can internalize the need for a lockdown, can redirect their energy, can cope with staying at home for an extended period because... well, we're adults.
But children can't do those things. Kids need to move. They need air. They need sun. Their physical and emotional development can be permanently damaged by a lack of these things in a way that adults' are not. And the government's own health advisors agree.
So, you can imagine our indignation (to put it ridiculously mildly) when the government here announced a few hours ago that from next Monday a quick walk round the block with your kids will
not be allowed. But you will be able to take them to the supermarket or the bank or the pharmacy; i.e. one of the places that adults are allowed to go now if they really, really have to.
To the supermarket? To the
supermarket? Where our kids are going to touch all the fruit, run their hands along the shelves and lick the trolley handles?
Yes, they can go there.
But not around the block, while maintaining strict social distancing, for a quick breath of fresh air?
No, not that.
I am lost for words.
Litopia does not allow political discussion. And I'm a guardian here, so I should definitely not be doing it. But these are crazy times. The outcry here in Spain at the government's decision is huge, from all corners of the political spectrum, including from within the governing coalition itself.
This is beyond politics.
Perhaps, in light of the fury with which this decision has been met, a different course will be charted.
I hope so.