Spain’s Coronavirus Death Toll Rises by 838 Overnight to 6,528

MADRID (Reuters) —
A closed shopping mall is seen during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Madrid, Spain, Sunday. (Reuters/Susana Vera)

Spain awoke to its third week under near-total lockdown on Sunday, as the government met to approve a strengthening of measures and the coronavirus death toll rose by a record 838 cases overnight to 6,528.

Second only to Italy in fatalities, Spain also saw infections rise to 78,797 from 72,248 the day before.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, in an address to the nation on Saturday night, announced that all nonessential workers must stay at home for two weeks, the latest government measure in the fight against coronavirus.

He said workers would receive their usual salaries but would have to make up lost hours at a later date. The measure would last from March 30 to April 9.

Unions welcomed the measures and business groups CEOE and CEPYME said that while they would comply with the new rule, “it will generate an unprecedented huge impact on the Spanish economy, especially in sectors such as industry.”

The slowdown “may lead to a deeper crisis in the economy that could become social,” they warned in a statement.

In Madrid, birdsong drowned out traffic on deserted streets on Sunday morning as police reinforced patrols, stopping buses and cars to check passengers had reason to be out of their homes.

Schools, bars, restaurants and shops selling nonessential items have been shut since March 14 and most of the population is housebound as Spain tries to curb the virus.

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