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Reuters
Reuters
Entertainment
Silvia Aloisi and Emilio Parodi

Kiss me? Are you mad? Coronavirus turns Italian life upside down

Venetians gather in a local bar to have aperol spritz in the morning, after the government issued a decree to close schools, cinemas, and urge people to work from home and not stand closer than one meter to each other, in Venice, Italy, March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Manuel Silvestri

A day after their government ordered a limit on public gatherings and recommended that people avoid shaking hands to limit the spread of the coronavirus, normally sociable Italians have been grappling with new habits.

At Iginio Massari, a well-known cafe in central Milan, customers no longer take their morning cappuccino at the counter but have to wait to be served at a table, while keeping a distance of at least a meter from other customers and staff.

A man stands behind a menu stand at an empty restaurant at Piazza Navona, after the government decree to close schools, cinemas, and urge people to work from home and not stand closer than one metre to each other in Rome, Italy, March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Yara Nardi

Yet further along the street, there are plenty of people drinking coffee and eating cornettos at the bar.

"I know there's an order and they could fine me 1,500 euros ($1,680) but I'm still serving coffee at the bar," said one barista who did not want to give his name. "We have so few customers anyway that they're usually on their own.

"Normally we get through 7-8 kilos of coffee in a morning and now if we get to three we're happy. If it keeps up like this, we'll have to close."

General view of Palazzo Nuovo University of Turin after the government decree to close cinemas, schools and urge people to work from home and not stand closer than one metre to each other, in Turin, Italy, March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Massimo Pinca

It is a small sign of how people are still coming to grips with the crisis in Italy, so far Europe's worst affected country where more than 100 deaths have been attributed to the virus since it first emerged in a town near Milan two weeks ago.

Already the virus has spread from the north, with cases appearing in the capital Rome and as far south as Sicily.

"We are all worried but without alarmism or hysteria. Clearly we're trying to understand the situation and we're trying to read between the lines," said Rome resident Fiamma Volpini.

A waiter stands by empty tables outside a restaurant at St Mark?s Square, which is usually full of tourists, after Italy?s government adopted a decree with emergency new measures to contain the coronavirus, in Venice, Italy, March 5, 2020. Italy?s tourism industry has been suffering hugely since the outbreak. REUTERS/Manuel Silvestri

Late on Wednesday, the government announced a series of measures aimed at limiting contact between people in a bid to slow the spread of the virus.

As well as closing schools and universities, suspending large public events and ordering sports events to be held behind closed doors, the decree recommends that people do not shake hands or hug each other and that they maintain a distance of at least one meter.

In churches, worshippers are discouraged from the traditional handshake as a sign of peace at mass and kissing on the cheek, an everyday exchange for people of every generation in Italy, has become a delicate question of contagion etiquette.

General view of empty Duomo after Italy's bishops ordered that Masses not be held during the week in churches in areas of the north of the country affected by the coronavirus outbreak, in Milan, Italy, March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

"I've just met one of my neighbors and I kissed him but yesterday I went to greet one of my friends with a kiss on the cheek and she stopped me saying, 'are you mad?'" said one woman in Milan who did not want to give her name.

The change has been especially striking in Milan, Italy's financial capital, which until two weeks ago was basking in its image as the dynamic exception to the country's decades-long economic malaise.

Now trams and underground trains are much emptier than normal, museums are empty and shopkeepers sit waiting for customers.

People walk in San Federico gallery after the government decree to close cinemas, schools and urge people to work from home and not stand closer than one metre to each other, in Turin, Italy, March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Massimo Pinca

Although the city's famed cathedral has re-opened to visitors, it is admitting only 10 at a time.

"But that is not really the problem, as there is no one inside anyway," a security guard at the doors said.

Venetians gather in a local bar to have aperol spritz in the morning, after the government issued a decree to close schools, cinemas, and urge people to work from home and not stand closer than one meter to each other, in Venice, Italy, March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Manuel Silvestri

(Additional reporting by Emily Roe, Valentina Za; Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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