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Italian officials at the European council headquarters in Brussels
Maurizio Massari (left), Italy’s ambassador to the EU, and the interior minister, Luciana Lamorgese, at the European council headquarters in Brussels. Photograph: Thierry Monasse/Getty Images
Maurizio Massari (left), Italy’s ambassador to the EU, and the interior minister, Luciana Lamorgese, at the European council headquarters in Brussels. Photograph: Thierry Monasse/Getty Images

Italy criticises EU for being slow to help over coronavirus epidemic

This article is more than 4 years old

Italian ambassador says Brussels has to ‘go beyond engagement and consultations’

The Italian government has accused the EU and its member states of being slow in coming to the country’s aid over the coronavirus epidemic.

As leaders held a summit by videoconference and agreed that up to 70% of Europeans could be infected by Covid-19, Italy’s ambassador to the EU complained of a lack of solidarity among member states.

Maurizio Massari said Brussels needed to “go beyond engagement and consultations” and devise “emergency actions that are quick, concrete and effective”.

A flashpoint has been the failure of member states to respond to a call by Italy for extra supplies of medical equipment, including masks.

Germany and France are among the EU countries to have imposed limits on the export of protective medical equipment, while China has offered to sell Italy 1,000 lung ventilators, 2m masks, 20,000 protective suits and 50,000 swabs for coronavirus tests.

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“We must ensure, under EU coordination, the supply of the necessary medical equipment and its redistribution among those countries and regions most in need,” Massari wrote on Politico’s website.

“Today, this means Italy; tomorrow, the need could be elsewhere. Italy has already asked to activate the European Union mechanism of civil protection for the supply of medical equipment for individual protection. But unfortunately not a single EU country responded to the commission’s call. Only China responded bilaterally. Certainly this is not a good sign of European solidarity.”

During a two-and-a-half-hour “e-summit” on Monday evening, EU leaders vowed to increase coordination and release funds of up to €25bn (£22bn).

The commission will make €7.5bn available, which could trigger co-funding by national governments of €17.5- €18bn.

The EU will also be flexible in the implementation of its rules on state aid to allow governments to subsidise industry where required.

The European council’s president, Charles Michel, said member states had agreed they would “stand ready to make use of all instruments that are necessary” in order to tackle four priorities: limiting the spread of the virus, ensuring supplies of medical equipment, promoting research on vaccines and treatment, and handling the economic fallout.

He said the European commission would purchase personal protective equipment to supply to member states.

“It must be ensured that the internal market functions properly and any unjustified obstacles are avoided,” he said. “Particular attention must be given to masks and respirators.”

However, the bloc failed to agree on a co-ordinated fiscal stimulus beyond the use of piecemeal national funds to support their healthcare systems and economies.

Asked whether the decision by Austria and Slovenia to close their borders to Italy was a proportionate response, the European commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said home affairs ministers would in future have daily calls to ensure that all the steps taken were appropriate.

Following a phone call on Wednesday afternoon, the Italian prime minister Giuseppe Conte issued a joint statement with von der Leyen calling for “any restrictive measure by member states to be first discussed at the European level, so that vital supplies go where they are needed most, the internal market functions properly and any unjustified obstacle is avoided”.

Amid criticism of the EU’s lack of solidarity with Italy, the statement also emphasised that the country was at the “forefront” of the crisis and that there would be further coordination with the 26 other member states as the epidemic was formally described as a pandemic by the WHO.

Speaking after the discussion with other leaders, Bulgaria’s prime minister, Boyko Borissov, spoke of his concern at the lethargic response to the epidemic.

He posted on Facebook: “Today at the videoconference with my European council colleagues, specialist analyses were quoted that said that coronavirus would affect more than 70% of Europe’s population.”

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