There
have been nearly 16,900 coronavirus deaths and 823,335 cases so far, according
to an official tally on Sunday. Primary schools reopened on March 15.
Monday’s
easing comes with some guidelines. Only four people will be able to sit together
at a table in cafe terraces while museums can change their opening hours. Group
training sessions at gyms and sports venues remain banned.
“We are expecting
very few visitors” due to the paucity of foreign tourists, Antonio Nunes
Pereira, director of the Palace of Pena in Sintra, outside Lisbon, told AFP.
“We
expect a return to normal next summer… when the vaccination process advances in
Europe,” he said.
The museum is one of Portugal’s most visited sites and drew
over two million visitors in 2019.
Eighty-five percent of them were foreigners.
The government has launched mass Covid tests and started vaccinating teachers.
It plans to start reopening high schools, universities and auditoriums, and
concert halls later this month and restaurants in May.
The situation is being
reviewed every two weeks and the government can tighten restrictions in
municipalities with a high number of cases.
Portugal has suspended flights with
Brazil and Britain to ward off the new variants that emerged in those countries
and tightened controls on the land border with Spain.
AFP
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