As COVID-protocol protests run rampant in Europe, so does the deadly coronavirus itself.
Several governments in the once — and now current — pandemic epicenter have taken tough but necessary measures to stem what German Chancellor Angela Merkel calls a "highly dramatic" situation (quite an adjective for the decidedly undramatic politician).
Her health minister, Jens Spahn, spoke even more bluntly: By the end of winter, he said, "just about everyone in Germany will either be vaccinated, recovered, or dead."
So several European governments, with the right and responsibility to protect their people from any invasion, including a viral one, are taking action. For instance Austria — which along with neighboring nations Slovakia, Slovenia, and the Czech Republic had the world's highest rate of reported new cases last week — went into its fourth lockdown.
The government shut down shops, cafes and restaurants, sporting venues and cultural institutions for at least 10 and as many as 20 days. More significantly, Vienna declared vaccinations mandatory by Feb. 1, becoming the first Western country to take such a step.
These prudent protections sparked protests, with at least 40,000 taking to Vienna's streets last weekend. Elsewhere, in several countries across the continent, including Belgium, Denmark, Italy, Switzerland, Croatia and the Netherlands, people gathered in public places to push back against renewed rules.
In many locations, violence erupted. Or an "orgy of violence," as the mayor of Rotterdam deemed it, adding that soccer hooligans were believed to be involved in incidents where police shot and wounded two protesters amid demonstrations in which police cars were burned and officers' lives reportedly endangered.
In Brussels, nearly 35,000 protested near the European Union headquarters, with some throwing stones and setting fires in incidents that resulted in more than 40 arrests and three injured officers. Belgium's prime minister, Alexander de Croo, defended the right to protest but rightly characterized the violence as "absolutely unacceptable."