Tantrums Over? Spain to Let Children Out, Aims for May Lockdown Ease

Tantrums Over? Spain to Let Children Out, Aims for May Lockdown Ease
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez delivers a speech during a session at the Lower Chamber of the Spanish Parliament in Madrid on April 22, 2020. (J. J. Guillen/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)
Reuters
4/22/2020
Updated:
4/22/2020
Relieved Spanish parents welcomed on April 22 a decision allowing children out on short walks for the first time in more than a month as the government contemplated a broader easing of one of the world’s strictest CCP virus lockdowns by late May.

With the world’s second most infections at 208,389, and Europe’s second highest death toll of 21,717, Spain’s tough restrictions have included a controversial ban on children leaving their homes since mid-March.

However, on Tuesday night, the government bowed to public pressure and said those under 14 would be able to take short walks outside under supervision from the weekend.

The cabinet had initially said children would only be allowed to accompany parents to buy food or medicine, provoking a social media backlash and pot-banging protests on balconies.

Parents welcomed the concession, though it came late for some, stretched to the limit after nearly six weeks cooped up at home.

Josep Pons wearing a face mask walks among abandoned roses at his family rose plant nursery Flors Pons in Santa Susanna, near Barcelona, Spain, on April 22, 2020. (David Ramos/Getty Images)
Josep Pons wearing a face mask walks among abandoned roses at his family rose plant nursery Flors Pons in Santa Susanna, near Barcelona, Spain, on April 22, 2020. (David Ramos/Getty Images)

“The escalation of anxiety, tantrums, irascible behavior... have been in crescendo,” said Dr. Iban Onandia, 35, a neuropsychologist in the Basque province of Bizkaia, adding that children had paid an “indecent” price during the lockdown.

“The truth is that the educational system we have is not up to the job either because they’ve left many children to their own devices, including my own,” added the father of two children, aged four and two.

Ramon Motta, a Madrid-based maitre d'hotel with two daughters Carla, 11, and Ariadna, 8, resorted to setting up a tent in their fifth-floor apartment to keep them entertained.

“We have Disney+, Netflix, and videogames, but you don’t want your kids spending five-six-seven hours in front of a screen, yet at the same time there’s not much else to do,” he said.

“After such a long time locked in, kids and parents start losing patience pretty quickly. A couple of times Carla went into a tantrum.”

A volunteer disinfects the streets of the town during the CCP virus pandemic in Zahara de la Sierra, Spain, on April 20, 2020. (Juan Carlos Toro/Getty Images)
A volunteer disinfects the streets of the town during the CCP virus pandemic in Zahara de la Sierra, Spain, on April 20, 2020. (Juan Carlos Toro/Getty Images)

Tomato-Throwing Fiesta Off

As his left-wing coalition marked 100 days in office, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez sought parliamentary approval to prolong a state of emergency until May 9—the third such extension.

With the epidemic seemingly past its peak, the lockdown could start to be phased out toward the end of May, though measures will be eased gradually, he told lawmakers.

“We will be going back-and-forth depending on how the pandemic evolves,” he said.

A sharp slowdown in infections has Spaniards optimistic their nightmare may be easing, and officials are turning their attention to restarting the flagging economy.

In one sign of nascent recovery, carmaker Volkswagen’s Spanish unit SEAT, which employs around 15,000 people, said it plans to resume production from April 27, though with 3,000 CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus tests a week on its workforce to minimize risk.

A man takes pictures with a smartphone as revelers throw tomatoes during the "Tomatina" festival in Bunol, Spain, on Aug. 29, 2018. (Jose Jordan/ AFP via Getty Images)
A man takes pictures with a smartphone as revelers throw tomatoes during the "Tomatina" festival in Bunol, Spain, on Aug. 29, 2018. (Jose Jordan/ AFP via Getty Images)

But in the latest blow to Spain’s vital tourism industry, authorities in the Valencian town of Bunol postponed the 75th annual “Tomatina” festival, where thousands gather every August to pelt each other with fresh tomatoes.

It was the first cancellation since 1957.

On Tuesday, the San Fermin bull-running fiesta in Pamplona was also suspended, for the first time in four decades.

Spain has been pressing for a stronger European Union-wide economic response, including a 1.5 trillion euro ($1.63 trillion) fund financed by perpetual debt to support the bloc’s worst-hit members.

Sanchez said an initial consensus on the financial response should be reached at a summit on Thursday.

By Nathan Allen and Emma Pinedo
Epoch Times staff contributed to this report.