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Madrid adopts virus restrictions exposing poor-rich divide

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Police in the Spanish capital and its surrounding towns are stopping people coming in and out of some working-class neighborhoods that have been partially locked down to stem Europe’s fastest coronavirus spread

The measures, including a requirement to justify trips out of the neighborhoods and reduced occupancy in shops and restaurants, affect some 860,000 residents and have been met with protests because many of those affected and some experts consider that authorities are stigmatizing the poor.

Madrid has become the epicenter of contagion, with a rate of infection — 682.57 cases per 100,000 inhabitants in two weeks — nearly three times the national average of 267.82. Europewide, that number last week was 76.

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, a Socialist, met on Monday with Isabel Díaz Ayuso, of the conservative opposition Popular Party, agreeing for central and regional officials to hold bi-weekly technical and weekly political meetings to coordinate a stronger response to the outbreaks.

A few dozen protesters clad in Spanish flags called for Sánchez to step down outside of the Madrid government’s meeting place.

On the first day of the new limitations, police in the Spanish capital and its surrounding towns stopped people coming in and out of the targeted areas but only to relay information. Enforcement of stay-in orders will be mandatory starting from Wednesday and those not justifying their trips for work, study or medical reasons will face fines, regional authorities said.

The targeted areas have a 14-day rate of transmission above 1,000 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, some of the highest in Europe. They are also densely populated with less-affluent residents who cram into small apartments and use public transportation to work in manual jobs in other areas of the city.

Some people online shared photos of crammed rush-hour subway trains, complaining that the problem was not in the suburbs but due to the lack of sufficient public transport.

In the hard-hit Vallecas district, Raul Hernández said that his coffee shop expected less business.

“Yesterday afternoon the change started to be seen and today we are not doing anything,” he said. “People are accepting it well, they understand it but they are afraid.”

Videos shared online by several attendees to Sunday’s performance of Giuseppe Verdi’s “Un ballo in maschera” at the Royal Theater in Madrid showed some full rows in the highest — and cheapest — gallery, while attendance in the pricier floor area had been reduced, leaving empty seats.

The performance was canceled after several rounds of applause and shouting during the performance and despite the theater relocating some spectators and offering to return the value of their tickets, the Royal Theater said in a statement.

The theater, which has launched an investigation into the incident, said that attendance had been reduced to 905 seats, or 51.5% of the total. Current rules in Madrid limit cultural performances to 75% of the audience.

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Alicia León contributed to this report.

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