- Title: Relatives of man who died of COVID-19 after Ischgl ski trip sue Austria
- Date: 17th September 2021
- Summary: ISCHGL, AUSTRIA (FILE - OCTOBER 19, 2020) (REUTERS) VARIOUS EXTERIORS OF "KITZLOCH" APRES-SKI BAR, CONSIDERED TO BE ISCHGL'S EPICENTRE FOR THE COVID-19 OUTBREAK COWS GRAZING IN FRONT OF CHURCH TOWN VIEW SEEN FROM A DISTANCE OVERSIZED SKI GOGGLES WITH TOWN'S MOTTO IN ENGLISH READING "ISCHGL / RELAX. IF YOU CAN..." VARIOUS OF TOWN AND SKI RACKS VARIOUS OF COWS GRAZING CROSSED OUT ISCHGL TOWN SIGN TO MARK TOWN LIMIT
- Embargoed: 1st October 2021 11:35
- Keywords: COVID-19 coronavirus superspreader event Ischgl ski resort apres-ski courtcase death infection party town relatives trial opening victims
- Location: ISCHGL & VIENNA, AUSTRIA
- City: ISCHGL & VIENNA, AUSTRIA
- Country: Austria
- Topics: Crime/Law/Justice,Europe,Judicial Process/Court Cases/Court Decisions
- Reuters ID: LVA003EV3W8XZ
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Austrian authorities, in a trial which opened in Vienna on Friday (September 17), stand accused of responding too slowly to the coronavirus outbreak at the ski resort of Ischgl in early 2020.
The outbreak at Ischgl was Austria's biggest and helped spread the virus across Europe.
Hundreds of Austrians were infected and thousands of foreign tourists say they were too as the virus found a breeding ground in crowded apres-ski bars at the resort, a party hotspot that branded itself the "Ibiza of the Alps".
In the case, the first of more than a dozen civil lawsuits brought by a consumer rights group, the widow and son of a man who died after being exposed to the coronavirus in Ischgl are seeking 100,000 euros ($117,780) in damages from the Austrian government.
The private Consumer Protection Association (VSV), which has brought the case against the government, says authorities mishandled the response to the outbreak, possibly giving in to pressure from the tourism sector not to act initially.
"Business closures happened very reluctantly," the plaintiffs' lawyer Alexander Klauser told reporters.
"It was already known that a waiter at the Kitzloch apres-ski bar had tested positive for coronavirus. Yet, all that happened was a disinfection of the site and an alleged personnel swap before the Kitzloch was allowed to reopen," said Klauser.
The authorities in the province of Tyrol say they responded appropriately given what was known at the time.
Ischgl's first case was detected on March 7, 2020, days after Iceland said that tourists had been infected there and 11 days after Austria's first infections were confirmed.
Austria's public health agency has since said it believes the virus arrived in Ischgl far earlier, on Feb. 5.
(Production: Leonhard Foeger, Michele Sani) - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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