Spain to keep social distancing on beaches to fight virus - GulfToday

Spain to keep social distancing on beaches to fight virus

Spain tourism 8

A woman walks her dog at the empty Santa Ponca beach in Calvia. AFP

Spain, one of Europe's top sunshine destinations, said Sunday it will maintain social distancing rules to curb the spread of the coronavirus once a nationwide lockdown ends, even on the beaches.

"It is very important that we continue to follow health recommendations, we must keep up what we are doing now, washing our hands, keeping social distance...even on the beach.

The government on March 14 imposed a strict nationwide lockdown to fight the pandemic, and two days later it closed its land borders, with only Spanish citizens and residents able to enter the country.

In an interview Tourism Minister Reyes Maroto said the government did not know when the borders would be reopened, saying it will depend on how "the health crisis evolves".

View of the empty Santa Ponca beach in Calvia during a national lockdown. AFP

A woman walks her dogs at the empty Santa Ponca beach. AFP

View of a closed swimming pool at Santa Ponca beach. AFP

Boats are pictured at the empty Punta Portals marina in Calvia during a national lockdown. AFP

A man wearing a face mask walks at the empty Santa Ponca beach. AFP

View of the closed Santa Ponca beach in Calvia. AFP

"It is very important that we continue to follow health recommendations, we must keep up what we are doing now, washing our hands, keeping social distance...even on the beach," she added when asked if access to beaches would be limited once the lockdown ends.

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"Until there is a vaccine nothing will be the way it was before. Gatherings will have to have limitations to maintain an adequate safety distance," she added.

Beaches have been closed across Spain with people allowed out of their homes only to work, buy food, seek medical care or briefly walks their dog.

Spain is the world's second-most visited country after France and tourism is crucial for the domestic economy, making up nearly 12 percent of gross domestic product.

It hit a record of tourist arrivals for the seventh year in a row last year, with nearly 84 million foreign visitors.

Now it is one of the hardest-hit nations in the world with nearly 17,000 COVID-19 fatalities.

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