The Washington Post - 13.03.2020

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A22 eZ re the washington post.friday, march 13 , 2020


The coronavirus outbreak


BY DAVID J. LYNCH

If the novel coronavirus causes
a new global financial crisis, it
may start with an Italian bank.
Already, Italy’s economy has
been brought to an abrupt halt by
the nationwide quarantine offi-
cials imposed earlier this week in
hopes of arresting the worst out-
break of covid-19, the disease
caused by the virus, outside of
China.
With more than 12,000 corona-
virus cases, the Italian govern-
ment tightened its lockdown this
week, announcing that all stores,
except f or pharmacies and grocer-
ies, will be required to close. As
commercial activity ceases in the
world’s eighth-largest economy,
the risk of a broader contagion
may turn o n how well Italy’s b anks
— long regarded as Europe’s
weakest — withstand the test.
Cash-strapped businesses and
households may stop repaying
their bank loans. At the same
time, the government bonds that
make up a big chunk of bank
assets may lose value as rome’s
costly anti-crisis spending spooks
investors. That would erode
banks’ capital reserves and crimp
their lending, further slowing the
economy.
on Thursday, the European
Central Bank announced in
frankfurt measures designed to
bolster Europe’s slow-growing
economy against the debilitating
effects of the virus. ECB President
Christine Lagarde warned the
union’s political leaders on a con-
ference call this week that they
would face a 2008-style financial
crisis if they failed to launch coor-
dinated actions.
The ECB said it would increase
its bond purchases by 120 billion
euros through the end of this year
and approved a new lending pro-
gram for banks d esigned t o funnel
cheap money to European busi-
nesses. The ECB surprised inves-
tors by opting not to further cut
interest rates.
At a news conference following
the meeting, Lagarde said the
ECB would “use all the t ools avail-
able” to combat the worsening
economic outlook. And she called
for countries that use the euro to
launch “ambitious and collective”
spending programs to boost
growth, saying that governments’
fiscal efforts should be the “first
and foremost” r esponse t o the cri-
sis.
“It is clear the economies of the
world and certainly the econo-

mies of the euro area are facing a
major shock,” s he said.
The high-level ECB meeting
came as worries about Italian
banks a re becoming evident.
Since mid-february, the inter-
est rate or yield that Italy pays on
its government bonds has risen
even as countries such a s the Unit-
ed States and Germany have seen
their borrowing costs fall. Like-
wise, investors now must pay
twice as much to insure their gov-
ernment securities against a po-
tential Italian default.
As I taly’s s tock market f ell more
than other European exchanges,
Italian bank stocks were among
the biggest casualties. Shares of
UniCredit, the nation’s largest
bank, plunged over the past
month by 39 percent. Some ana-
lysts now worry about a “doom
loop” where doubts about the fi-
nances of Italy’s government and
banks feed on each other in a
vicious circle.
“It’s a pretty significant down-
side risk,” s aid Neil Shearing, chief
economist for Capital Economics
in London. “It’s easy to see things
unravel quickly if the shock to the
economy i s bigger than expected.”
most analysts do not yet antici-
pate the virus leading to the sort of
global financial tumult that
shaved $15 trillion off Americans’
net worth in the 2008-09 crisis.
Global banks a re healthier, h aving
been forced by regulators in the
United States and Europe to hold
more capital in reserve and to
refrain from some of the riskiest
practices that fueled the housing
bubble.
But dangers lurk in some cor-
ners of the industry. China over
the past year has witnessed a
number of bank closures and de-
positor runs. With the country’s
economy slowing sharply, an ac-
cumulation of nonperforming
loans c ould become a bigger head-
ache.
Long regarded as Europe’s
weakest financial institutions, It-
aly’s banks have thinner capital
cushions than the average conti-
nental bank and hold more than
twice as many bad loans. The
banks as a whole own about one-
quarter of Italy’s $2.4 trillion out-
standing government debt, link-
ing the fate of the country’s finan-
cial institutions and its govern-
ment in a way that could prove
destabilizing in a sharp down-
turn.
Italian authorities also may be
less capable of managing a sud-
den banking crisis than their
counterparts in China, where the
government and the banking sys-
tem both answer to the Commu-
nist Party. That’s one reason
Shearing calls Italian banks “the
weakest link in the global chain.”
The Italian e conomy has disap-
pointed for years. In real or infla-

tion-adjusted terms, the average
Italian earns no more today than
20 years ago. The economy stag-
nated last year and is expected to
shrink by 2 percent this year, ac-
cording to Shearing.
Italian Prime minister
Giuseppe Conte said this week t he
government would allocate 25 bil-
lion euros (more than $28 billion)
to bolster the ecoomy from the
escalating toll — more than three
times the sum set aside just one
week ago.
Last w eek, the European Union
approved Italy’s spending plans,
which violated the union’s bud-
getary rules for countries that use
the euro. That move came less
than three months after Brussels
chided Italian officials for their
profligate ways.
The Italian government says it
plans a mortgage payment holi-
day, w hich should help businesses
and consumers, although it may
require public aid to make up the
loss to banks. B ut officials have yet
to provide details.
As it hikes spending to offset
the economic slowdown, Italy’s
debt — at 135 percent of gross
domestic product, second only to
Japan among major economies —
is certain to rise.
Ashoka mody, a former Inter-
national monetary fund official
who designed the 2009 interna-
tional bailout of Ireland’s b anking
system, said investors will push
up Italy’s borrowing costs and
precipitate a debt crisis over the
next several months.
In its annual review of the Ital-
ian economy, t he Imf warned l ast
year that an Italian crisis would
inevitably spread. “Spillovers
from heightened stress in Italy
would be global and significant,”
the fund said, adding that “acute
stress in Italy could push global
markets into uncharted territory.”
If Italy were downgraded to
junk status — which the fund said
would be “unprecedented” f or an
advanced economy — losses
would spread through financial
markets. Banks in france, Spain,
Portugal and Belgium all hold
substantial amounts of Italian
government debt, according to
the fund.
To head that off, Italy will need
a financial rescue that could cost
700 billion euros (roughly
$800 billion), mody said. And
ECB, Imf and U.S. Treasury offi-
cials should act before the situa-
tion worsens.
“The international community
has to come with bags of money,”
said mody, now an economics pro-
fessor at Princeton University.
“[The Italians] are dealing with a
humanitarian crisis. But the fact
of dealing with a humanitarian
crisis is going to create a financial
crisis.”
[email protected]

Where would a fiscal crisis begin?


Covid-19 lockdown has
abruptly halted Europe’s
weakest economy — Italy

BY ERIN CUNNINGHAM
AND DALTON BENNETT

ISTANBUL — Two days after Iran
declared its first cases of the novel
coronavirus — in what would
become one of the largest out-
breaks of the illness outside of
China — evidence of unusual ac-
tivity appeared at a cemetery near
where the infections emerged.
At the Behesht-e masoumeh
complex in Qom, about 80 miles
south of Te hran, the excavation of
a new section of the graveyard
began as early as feb. 21, satellite
images show, and rapidly expand-
ed as the virus spread. By the end
of the month, two large trenches
— their lengths totaling 100 yards
— were visible at the site from
space.
According to expert analysis,
video testimony and official state-
ments, the graves were dug to
accommodate the rising number
of virus victims in Qom.
Iran, a nation of about 80 mil-
lion people, has suffered a partic-
ularly deadly surge of coronavirus
infections, including among its
top leadership. Iran’s Health min-
istry says that 429 people have
died of the virus, which causes the
disease known as covid-19, and
more than 10,000 have fallen ill.
Among the dead are members of
parliament, a former diplomat
and even a senior adviser to the
Supreme Leader. At least two doz-
en other officials, including a vice
president, have been infected.
In Qom, the spiritual center of
Iran’s ruling Shiite clerics, more
than 846 people have contracted
the virus, officials say. Iran’s gov-


ernment has not released an offi-
cial death toll for Qom, however,
where about 1.2 million people
live. But videos, satellite images
and other open-source data from
the cemetery — a vast complex six
miles north of the city center —
suggest t hat the number of people
struck down by the virus there is
significantly higher than the offi-
cial figure.

A senior imagery analyst at
maxar Te chnologies in Colorado
said the size of the trenches and
the speed with which they were
excavated together mark a clear
departure from past burial prac-
tices involving individual and
family plots at the site. In addi-
tion to satellite imagery, videos
posted on social media from the
cemetery show the extended rows

of graves at Behesht-e masoumeh
and say they are meant for coro-
navirus victims.
The imagery analyst, who re-
quested anonymity because of the
sensitivity of his work, also point-
ed to an image showing what
appears to be a large white pile of
lime, which can be used to man-
age decay and odor in mass
graves. Iranian health officials

have in recent weeks confirmed
the use of lime when burying
coronavirus victims.
In a video, shared by the BBC’s
Persian service march 3, the nar-
rator describes the scene at Beh -
esht-e masoumeh cemetery as
men carry a casket toward a
trench with multiple graves.
Qom, like other parts of Iran, is
grappling with the coronavirus

outbreak that has overwhelmed
the public health infrastructure.
“This is the section for corona-
virus victims,” t he narrator says,
as the camera pans across a small
portion of the trench, showing
mounds of dirt and small, simple
markers. People wearing blue
protective suits are seen standing
nearby. “more than 80 [people]
have been buried in this section
so far, and they say only 34
de aths,” he says, citing the official
death toll on feb. 28.
fabian Hinz of the middlebury
Institute of International Studies,
who reviewed this and a second
video, said that unique geograph-
ical markers in the videos match
landmarks found near the ceme-
tery.
In the second video, another
narrator says that he is at the
Behesht-e masoumeh cemetery
on march 3, about two weeks
after Iran reported its first cases.
By that time, at least 77 people
had died of the virus, according to
official figures, and more than
2,000 people were infected,
though information from Te hran
hospitals reviewed by The Wash-
ington Post strongly suggests the
outbreak is far larger.
“A worker told me that they
must have buried more than 250
coronavirus victims so far,” the
caption reads. As the narrator
walks across the cemetery
grounds, he points the camera
down to highlight what he says
are new burials.
“These are all graves and they
are fresh,” he says, at one point
using a gloved index finger to
direct the viewer to the plots on
the horizon. “These are all from
the last few days,” he continues.
“A nd as you can see, it goes on
until the end.”
[email protected]
[email protected]

Bennett reported from Washington.

Massive burial pits suggest a more dire situation in Iran


Maxar technologies
images and other data from the cemetery in Qom, iran, suggest that the virus death toll there is significantly higher than the official figure.

Satellite images show


newly excavated trenches


as long as football fields


“It’s as if you were asking what
to do if an atomic bomb explodes,”
said Pesenti, the head of Lom-
bardy’s intensive crisis care unit.
“You declare defeat. We’ll try to
salvage what is salvageable.”
The uncontained eruption of
coronavirus cases in northern Ita-
ly has pushed this country’s
wealthiest r egion within inches of
a health-care system collapse,
while offering a warning to the
rest of the world against waiting
too long to control an outbreak.
Lombardy, home to Italy’s fi-
nancial hub of milan, boasts a
health-care system as proficient
as any in Western Europe. Its facil-
ities have clung on through three
weeks of galloping case growth by
delaying surgeries, stopping HIV
treatments, converting regular
hospital space i nto covid-19 units,
and depending on exhausted doc-
tors and nurses — some of whom
are becoming sick themselves.
But it can’t keep up for much
longer, with cascading implica-
tions for Italy’s ability to combat
the virus. Already, the region has
4,200 coronavirus patients in
need of hospitalization; Pesenti
projected that over the next two
weeks, that number could grow
nearly fivefold, to 20,000. As
many as 3,000 or 4,000 of them
would require intensive care.
Lombardy has just 737 inten-
sive-care beds available for coro-
navirus patients. more than 600
are filled.
“It would be an impossible situ-
ation,” Pesenti said.
The region is racing to bring
more beds online; it added 127 on
Thursday.
Giulio Gallera, Lombardy’s
health chief, said Thursday that
the region would reach its capacity
in “five, six or seven days,” even if it
tried to add more beds in hospital
“cellars.” I n an interview with Ita-
ly’s La7 channel, Gallera described
the possibility o f adding 500 inten-
sive-care beds at milan’s expo cen-
ter, the kind of rapidly assembled
zone that China created in the
hard-hit Wuhan area.
“It would be very important,”
Gallera said.
Lombardy’s health system has
become something of a compass
guiding the entire country. A s it has
come under increasing pressure in
recent days, Prime minister
Giuseppe Conte has raced to set
ever more stringent nationwide
measures, leading Wednesday to a


italy from a1


Hospitals


in Italy face


more cases


than beds


Giovanni rezza, the director of
the infectious-disease depart-
ment at Italy’s National Institute
of Health, said hospitals had not
yet faced the challenge of being
unable to treat patients, or having
to choose which patients get life-
saving care and which don’t.
“Up until now, everybody is be-
ing ventilated,” rezza said.
If hospitals run out of capacity,
he said, decisions will be made
based on life expectancy.
“for us, it’s really scary and
unacceptable to do this kind of
selection,” he said.
The hospital in Bergamo, a virus
hotspot, is widely considered to be
one of the most overburdened in
the Lombardy region. Luca Lorini,
the head of its emergency and criti-
cal care department, said it had not
yet been forced to pick some pa-
tients over others.
“But with this pace, we have but
a few days ahead of us” until that
happens, he said.
Italy is receiving supplies from
China, which has pledged to send
20,000 protective suits for medical
workers and 10,000 ventilators. It-
aly is trying to bring on another
20,000 health-care workers, with a
mix of recruitment and calling
people back from retirement. But
reaching that goal will take time.
Angelo Pan, the director of the
infectious-disease unit at a hospi-
tal in Cremona, said he once be-
lieved his hospital was well-posi-
tioned to handle a potential out-
break.
The hospital had 12 beds for
infectious-disease p atients. It n ow
has 2 50 coronavirus patients.
Pan said about 8 percent of the
people who have come for corona-
virus treatment have died. Some
of the doctors have become his
patients.
“I’m afraid,” he said. “People
say, ‘ You can’t s ay y ou are afraid.’ I
understand you shouldn’t say it.
But it’s n ot a joke.
“I hope not to die of this d isease.”
[email protected]
[email protected]

loveday Morris in Berlin and claudia
cavaliere in Milan contributed to this
report.

near-complete nationwide com-
mercial lockdown. The goal, offi-
cials say, is to keep people indoors
and slow the growth of cases, eas-
ing the burden on the hospitals.
But the results won’t be immedi-
ate, given the incubation period of
the virus. Numbers are expected to
continue to rise in the days ahead.
There is concern not only about
Lombardy — where cases have
risen from 2,250 to 8,725 in a week
— but also other p arts of the coun-
try, particularly the poorer south,
where the virus has spread less
rapidly but hospitals are far less
equipped.
“I’m afraid that the south of Italy
could have in a few weeks a worse
situation,” s aid maria rita Gismon-
do, a virologist at Luigi Sacco Uni-
versity Hospital in milan.
Lombardy provides a grim pic-
ture of how the virus’s danger
grows when a health system is
overburdened. The region ac-
counts for about one-sixth of Italy’s
population but nearly 60 percent
of its coronavirus cases and 75 per-
cent of its coronavirus deaths.
Among those treated in Lombardy,
the fatality rate is more than twice
as high — 8 .5 percent, compared
with 4 percent elsewhere in the
nation. And the problem is snow-
balling: The region has reported
nearly half of its 617 coronavirus
deaths in the past two days.
“Lombardy is the I talian Wuhan,
and the situation is worsening day
by day,” s aid p ublic health research-
er Nino Cartabellotta, president of
the Gimbe foundation. “This is a
red flag of the hospital overload in
Lombardy that goes along with the
narrative of health professionals o n
the f ront line.”
In interviews this week, and in
social media posts that have gone
viral, health-care workers have
described a feeling of powerless-
ness mixed with stress and fear.
They stay away from their fami-
lies. They speak angrily about
those who still compare the coro-
navirus to seasonal influenza.
Cristina mascheroni, the head of a
Lombardy association of inten-
sive care doctors, said colleagues
in WhatsApp groups were de-
scribing the situation as warlike.

luca Bruno/associated Press
Nurses await patients thursday at a hospital in Brescia, italy.
Officials fear they’ll soon have to pick who gets lifesaving care.

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