PARIS
(AP) — “Do as I say, but not as I do” was the message many British saw
in the behavior of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s key aide, who traveled
hundreds of miles with coronavirus symptoms during the country’s
lockdown.
While Dominic Cummings has faced calls for his firing
but support from his boss over his journey from London to the northern
city of Durham in March, few countries seem immune to the perception
that politicians and top officials are bending the rules that their own
governments wrote during the pandemic.
From
U.S. President Donald Trump to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, global decision-makers have frequently set bad examples,
whether it’s refusing to wear masks or breaking confinement rules aimed
at protecting their citizens from COVID-19.
Some
are punished when they’re caught, others publicly repent, while a few
just shrug off the violations during a pandemic that has claimed more
than 350,000 lives worldwide.
Here are some notable examples:
NEW ZEALAND HEALTH MINISTER CALLS HIMSELF AN “IDIOT”
In
April, New Zealand’s health minister was stripped of some of his
responsibilities after defying the country’s strict lockdown measures.
David Clark drove 19 kilometers (12 miles) to the beach to take a walk
with his family as the government was asking people to make historic
sacrifices by staying at home.
“I’ve
been an idiot, and I understand why people will be angry with me,”
Clark said. He also earlier acknowledged driving to a park near his home
to go mountain biking.
Prime
Minister Jacinda Ardern said normally she would fire Clark but that the
country couldn’t afford massive disruption in its health sector while
it was fighting the virus. Instead, she stripped Clark of his role as
associate finance minister and demoting him to the bottom of the Cabinet
rankings.
MEXICO’S LEADER SHAKES HANDS
Mexican
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said it pained him not to embrace
supporters during tours because of health risks, but he made a
remarkable exception in March, shaking hands with the elderly mother of imprisoned drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán.
Asked about shaking her hand when the government was urging citizens to
practice social distancing, López Obrador said it would have been
disrespectful not to.
“It’s very difficult humanly,” he said. “I’m not a robot.”
AMERICA’S PANDEMIC POLITICS
The
decision to wear a mask in public is becoming a political statement in
the U.S. It’s been stoked by Trump — who didn’t wear a mask during an
appearance at a facility making them — and some other Republicans, who
have questioned the value of masks. This month, pandemic politics
shadowed Trump’s trip to Michigan as he toured a factory making lifesaving medical devices.
He did not publicly wear a face covering despite a warning from the
state’s top law enforcement officer that refusing to do so might lead to
a ban on his return.
Presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden, meanwhile, wore a mask along with his wife, Jill,
as they laid a wreath Monday at a Delaware veterans’ memorial — his
first public appearance since mid-March. Trump later retweeted Fox News
analyst Brit Hume’s criticism of Biden for wearing a mask in public.
Vice President Mike Pence was criticized for not wearing a mask while on a visit to the Mayo Clinic.
NETANYAHU’S PASSOVER HOLIDAY
While the rest of Israel was instructed not to gather with their extended families for traditional Passover Seder
in April, Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin hosted their adult
children for the festive holiday meal, drawing fierce criticism on
social media. Israeli television showed a photo of Avner Netanyahu, the
premier’s younger son, attending the Seder at his father’s official
residence.
Benjamin Netanyahu later apologized in a televised address, saying he should have adhered more closely to the regulations.
THE FRENCH EXCEPTION
French President Emmanuel Macron also has been inconsistent with masks, leaving the French public confused. Although Macron has sometimes appeared in a mask for visits at hospitals and schools,
it’s a different story in the Elysee presidential palace and for
speeches. During a visit to a Paris hospital on May 15, Macron initially
wore a mask to chat with doctors but then removed it to talk with union
workers.
Interior
Minister Christophe Castaner also faced criticism this month for
huddling with dozens of mask-makers in a factory for a photo where
everyone removed their masks.
PUTIN’S DIFFERENT APPROACH
The only time Russian President Vladimir Putin wore protective gear in public was on March 24, when he visited a top coronavirus hospital in Moscow.
Before donning a hazmat suit, Putin shook hands with Dr. Denis
Protsenko, the head of the hospital. Neither wore masks or gloves, and a
week later, Protsenko tested positive for the virus. That raised
questions about Putin’s health, but the Kremlin said he was fine.
Putin
has since held at least seven face-to-face meetings, according to the
Kremlin website. He and others didn’t wear masks during those meetings,
and Putin also didn’t cover his face for events marking Nazi Germany’s
defeat in World War II.
When
asked why Putin doesn’t wear a mask during public appearances,
spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin has a different approach to
protecting the president’s health.
“When it comes to public events, we ask medical workers to test all the participants in advance,” Peskov told reporters.
PUERTO RICO OFFICIAL’S INCONSISTENT MESSAGE
Puerto
Rico Gov. Wanda Vázquez was criticized for not always wearing a mask
despite holding new conferences ordering people to cover their face
outside their homes and inside businesses. A member of the opposition
Popular Democratic Party also filed a police complaint last week against
members of Vázquez’s New Progressive Party, alleging they violated a
curfew by gathering to inaugurate the party’s new headquarters. Police
are investigating the incident, which angered many Puerto Ricans.
SCOTTISH MEDICAL OFFICIAL TAKES THE LOW ROAD
Scotland’s
chief medical officer, Dr. Catherine Calderwood, broke her own rules
and traveled to her second home during lockdown in April. She faced
blowback after photos emerged of her and her family visiting Earlsferry
in Fife, which is more than an hour’s drive from her main home in
Edinburgh. She apologized and resigned.
“I
did not follow the advice I’m giving to others,” Calderwood said. “I am
truly sorry for that. I’ve seen a lot of the comments from … people
calling me a hypocrite.”
JAPAN’S GAMBLING SCANDAL
A
top Japanese prosecutor was reprimanded and later resigned this month
after defying a stay-at-home recommendation in a gambling scandal.
Hiromu
Kurokawa, the country’s No. 2 prosecutor who headed the Tokyo High
Prosecutors’ Office, acknowledged that he wasn’t social distancing when
he played mahjong for money at a newspaper reporter’s home twice in May.
Japan didn’t enforce a stay-at-home recommendation, but his case
outraged the public because many were following social distancing
measures.
ITALIAN PRESS CONFERENCE CRITICISM
At
a March news conference to open a COVID-19 field hospital in Milan’s
old convention center, photographers and video journalists were pushed
into corners that did not allow proper spacing. Only text reporters were
given seating in line with regulations. The Codacons consumer
protection group announced it would file a complaint with prosecutors in
Milan.
“What
should have been a moment of great happiness and pride for Lombardy and
Italy was transformed into a surreal event, where in violation of the
anti-gathering rules, groups of crowds formed,” Codacons said.
SOUTH AFRICA’S RULE-BREAKING DINNER
In
April, Communications Minister Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams was placed on
special leave for two months and forced to apologize by President Cyril
Ramaphosa after she violated stay-at-home regulations. Ramaphosa
directed police to investigate after a photo emerged on social media of
Ndabeni-Abrahams and several others having a meal at the home of former
deputy minister of higher education Mduduzi Manana.
SPANISH HOSPITAL CEREMONY INVESTIGATED
Madrid’s
regional and city officials sparked controversy when they gathered on
May 1 for a ceremony shuttering a massive field hospital at a convention
center. Eager to appear in the final photo of a facility credited with
treating nearly 4,000 mild COVID-19 patients, dozens of officials didn’t
follow social distancing rules. Spain’s restrictions banned more than
10 people at events like the one that honored nurses and doctors. The
central government opened an investigation, and Madrid regional chief
Isabel Díaz Ayuso apologized. She said officials “got carried away by
the uniqueness of the moment.”
Former
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy also defied strict stay-at-home orders,
with a television station filming him power walking around in northern
Madrid. The Spanish prosecutor’s office is investigating whether Rajoy,
who was premier from 2011 to 2018, should be fined.
INDIAN CRICKET GAME CRITICIZED
In
India, a top leader of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata
Party drew flak last weekend after playing a game of cricket. Manoj
Tiwari, also a member of India’s parliament, said he followed social
distancing rules during the game. Videos circulating on social media
showed Tiwati without a mask. He was also seen taking selfies with
people.
LEADERS WHO FOLLOW THE RULES
Some
leaders are setting a good example, including Portuguese President
Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa. Media jokingly called him the most relaxed
politician in the world after he was photographed queuing at a
supermarket this month, wearing a mask and following social distancing
measures. The photo was widely shared on social media.
Another
rule-follower is Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who did not visit his
ill 96-year-old mother in a nursing home during the last eight weeks of
her life because of coronavirus restrictions. He only came to her
bedside during her final hours this month.
“The
prime minister has respected all guidelines,” according to a statement
read by a spokesman. “The guidelines allow for family to say goodbye to
dying family members in the final stage. And as such the prime minister
was with her during her last night.”
___
Adamson
reported from Leeds, England. Associated Press writers Dasha Litvinova
in Moscow; Ilan Ben Zion in Jerusalem; Colleen Barry in Milan, Italy;
Nick Perry in Wellington, New Zealand; Aritz Parra in Madrid; Mari
Yamaguchi in Tokyo; Sheikh Saaliq in New Delhi; and Raf Casert in
Brussels contributed.
___
Follow AP pandemic coverage at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak
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