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20 March, 2020










Line, bar and pie charts by Flourish team
On the 20th of March the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Estonia rose to 283 






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Friday 
20. March
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Enamik hospitaliseeritud nakatunutest on pärit Saaremaalt
(ERR)
“Tallinna ja Pärnu haiglatesse toimetatud koroonaviirusesse nakatunutest enamik on pärit Saaremaalt. Alles neljapäevast kehtib korraldus, et haige võib viia talle lähimasse haiglasse.”

















Estonia has ordered two weeks of isolation for every arrival
(ERR | Estonian World)
“All those entering Estonia will also have to undergo a 14-day quarantine period during which they must remain at home and not have direct contact with any other individuals. The quarantine measures mean it is unlawful for those so placed to leave their place of residence or permanent place of stay during that two week period which follows arrival in the country …”



Finland bars work commuting from Estonia during coronavirus emergency
(ERR)
“… reversing a move which had allowed this to happen for Estonians holding Finnish residency permits as an exception to quarantine conditions in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. The Finnish government's crisis committee made the decision Thursday night, ERR's online news in Estonian reports, and will take effect from Sunday, March 22, at midnight.”
“Those who permanently reside in Estonia but commute regularly to Finland for work must now decide which side of the Gulf of Finland they will remain on while the emergency situation persists. Both countries require all those arriving, including citizens, to undergo 14 days' quarantine as a coronavirus measure.”



Estonia moves fast to get funding to COVID-19 solutions
(Science Business)
“Hackathons are now commonplace among professional developers, but not generally organised by governments. The speedy organisation of last weekend’s event underlines how Estonia, known as one of the most tech-friendly countries in the world, potentially has greater resilience as the pandemic forces economies online.”



Euroopas on kriisi vastu kõige paremini kaitstud Eesti
(Postimees)
“See võib olla Eesti tähetund, kirjutab mõjukas päevaleht. See väike Balti riik on euroala üks dünaamilisemaid majandusi. Eelmise aasta majanduskasv oli üle nelja protsendi, tööpuudus alla viie protsendi, valitsusvõlg on pea olematu ja see annab piisavalt ruumi fiskaalstiimuliteks.”











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Thursday 
19. March
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Piirikontrolli algne eesmärk on Euroopa riikides hägustunud
(ERR)
“Sisejulgeoleku eksperdi Erkki Koorti hinnangul on paljudes Euroopa riikides sisepiiridel kontrolli kehtestamise algne eesmärk hägustunud ning sisepiiridel ja välispiiridel ei peaks olema ühesugune kontroll. … et Euroopa on sattunud justkui Schengeni-eelsesse aega ehk 1980. aastatesse ja see näitab, kui mugav inimeste elu tegelikult tänapäeval on.”



Piiride tagasitulek
 Kristi Raik, Postimees
“Loetletud nähtustel on üks ühine nimetaja: riikide ja inimeste vahelisi ülemaailmseid sidemeid peetakse üha enam erinevate ohtude allikaks. Eriti lääne avatud ühiskonnale on tegu põhjapaneva mõttelaadi muutumisega. Sellega kaasnevad poliitilised, majanduslikud ja meie igapäevaelu mõjutavad muutused, mille tagajärgi on raske ette näha.”



Piiriäärsed firmad kardavad katastroofi
Ülle Harju, Postimees
“Mitu Kagu-Eesti ettevõtet on katastroofieelses olukorras, sest peale ukrainlaste ei pääse eilsest enam tööle ka lätlased.”



Piiride sulgemine näitab, et Euroopas saavutatu võib päevaga kaduda
(ERR)
“Euroopas panid liikmesriigid oma sisepiirid kinni ilma naabritega kooskõlastamata. Me näeme seda, et saavutatu võib ühe päevaga kaduda. Kui veoautod seisavad ummikus Poolas 80-kilomeetri pikkusel maanteelõigul, siis pole mõtet rääkida Euroopa ühest alusväärtusest, aluspõhimõttest, kaupade vabast liikumisest. Selgelt Euroopa Komisjoni sekkumine sellesse piiride sulgemisse on jäänud liiga aeglaseks.”



Eesti tõstatas Poola piiri teema NATO-s ja USA-s
(ERR)
“Välisminister lisas, et Eesti Saksa-saadiku andmetel on näiteks ühes piiripunktis Poolaga kasvanud järjekord juba 70 kilomeetri pikkuseks ja selles on umbes 10,000 veokit.”




The impact of COVID-19 on military exercises in Europe
(ICDS)
“Essentially, all movement of personnel and equipment from the United States to Europe has ceased and several of the linked exercises have been cancelled. The list of cancelled exercises includes … Saber Strike (a combined-joint exercise to take place in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland) …”



Tallinna-Peterburi-Moskva rongi väljumised peatati
(Postimees)
“Seoses Covid-19 haigust põhjustava koroonaviiruse levikuga on alates 20. märtsist Tallinna-Peterburi-Moskva rongi väljumised ajutiselt peatatud ning juba müüdud piletid ostetakse tagasi.”



Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs lists options for returning to Estonia
(Baltic Course)
“In cooperation with Estonian company AlphaGIS, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has also created a new map application indicating the transit options for returning to Estonia as at 9 a.m. local time on March 19, which can be viewed at https://bit.ly/3b0Sv4S."
“People returning from abroad must remain in isolation at home for a period of 14 days. The purpose of isolation is to prevent the spread of coronavirus.”



Transiidivõimalused Eestisse naasmiseks
(Välisministeerium)



Koroonaviirus vallandas sotsiaalmeedias väärinfotsunami
(Novaator)
“Olukorras, kus toimub palju, tehakse palju suure mõjuga otsuseid ja olukord on erakorraline, on kindlasti normaalne, et inimestel tekib igasuguseid erinevaid teooriaid ja nägemusi," nentis Hannes Krause, valitsuse strateegilise kommunikatsiooni juht …”



Only people in risk groups to be tested for coronavirus in Estonia
(ERR)
“The ability to test for the virus exists in Health Board, Tartu University Hospital, Synlab, North Estonia Medical Center, Ida-Viru Central Hospital and Pärnu Hospital laboratories. By yesterday morning, 2,020 tests had been administered for an average of 500-600 a day.”

















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Wednesday 
18. March
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Eesti ja Läti vahel läks piir kinni
(LõunaEesti Postimees)
“Eesti lõunapiiril taastati koroonaviiruse leviku tõkestamiseks teisipäeva südaöösel ajutine piirikontroll, mis jätab enamiku välismaalastest raja taha ning koju naasvad Eesti elanikud peavad arvestama piirangutega.”















Ferries organized as hundreds of Baltic residents stuck on the Germany–Poland border
(Latvian Broadcasting)
“On the evening of March 16, Poland opened the border with Germany to foreign buses and minibuses with more than seven seats, allowing some Baltic residents to return home during the coronavirus pandemic. But last night more than 500 people were still stuck on the German side of the border as Poland didn't let passengers cars through. …”














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Russia | Putin
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Moscow has closed or restricted the borders with all but three neighbors
(Meduza)
“Russia maintains open borders with three contiguous neighbors: Azerbaijan, Belarus, and Finland. Various restrictions are in place at Russia’s borders with its other 11 neighbors: Georgia, Latvia, Lithuania, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, Norway, Poland, North Korea, Ukraine, and Estonia.”



















A New Russia Is Taking Shape and There Is No Turning Back
(Moscow Times)
“What is happening is unprecedented in Russian history. The head of state is openly announcing that he is prepared to find a way of staying in the presidential post even after the timeframe set by the law has expired — and that he plans to stay for a long time. Moreover, he is doing that just as expectations that he would depart sooner had become quite intense. ”



Putin Worries Coronavirus Could Screw Up His Constitutional ‘Coronation’
by Anna Nemtsova, The Daily Beast
“Russia’s parliament has just paved the way for Vladimir Putin to run in rubber-stamp elections and serve in office until he’s in his 80s. … Although the Russian parliament passed the necessary amendments to the constitution on March 11 with a vote of 383 to 0, they are supposed to receive popular approval in a plebiscite scheduled for April 22. And if the coronavirus pandemic takes off in Russia before then—or, rather, can be seen to have taken off—the new czar might have to wait for his quasi-constitutional quasi-coronation. …”



Coronavirus and the Kursk Submarine Disaster
by Masha Gessen, The New Yorker
“The most striking aspect of Putin’s failure to accept responsibility for the Kursk disaster was his retreat into bureaucratese. It was a preview of the twenty years since (and possibly the next twenty). Putin’s use of bureaucratic language is a means of misleading the public and deflecting responsibility, but it also offers an insight into his understanding of government. He saw himself as a figurehead who might get in the way of people doing their work, and seemed unaware that his job was to lead the effort. Perhaps as a result, the Russian Navy and government were overcautious, rejected foreign help, and didn’t even respond to the S.O.S. signals from the submarine.”



Fortress Russia Begins to Show Cracks as Coronavirus Spreads
(Foreign Policy)
“As the coronavirus pandemic has spread, bringing nations to a halt and killing over 8,000 people in recent weeks around the globe, Russia emerged as a rare spot of calm—or perhaps indifference. … However, in less than 48 hours, that image has begun to crumble as the Russian government has kicked its response to COVID-19 into overdrive: shutting down its borders, limiting air travel, closing schools, and launching a large economic stimulus as medical experts have begun to question Russia’s official coronavirus statistics and the true efficacy of the response to limit its spread.”




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