Lifestyle

Trial begins over COVID outbreak in Austrian ski resort

VIENNA — A civil trial opened Friday in Austria over the government’s handling of a coronavirus outbreak at an Alpine ski resort during the early stages of the pandemic that relatives say resulted in unnecessary infections and deaths.

Sieglinde and Ullrich Schopf, the widow and son of a 72-year-old Austrian man who died of COVID-19 after becoming infected in Ischgl, are seeking about $117,000 compensation from the government. Their is seen as a test case for a larger class action suit involving hundreds of people who fell ill with COVID-19 following a trip to the Paznaun valley in February and March 2020.

The family is supported by Austria’s Consumer Protection Association, which said it is open to a negotiated settlement.

The outbreak in Ischgl, a popular resort in western Austria, is considered one of Europe’s earliest “super-spreader” events of the pandemic.

The town sign is pictured, as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak continues, in the Tyrolean ski resort of Ischgl, Austria, October 19, 2020.
A 72-year-old Austrian man died of COVID-19 after becoming infected in Ischgl. Reuters

“Stopping people from leaving and arriving in the Paznaun valley or at least issuing a travel warning — the authorities failed to do that,” said Alexander Klauser, a lawyer representing the Schopf family. “Thousands of people left the Paznaun valley unhindered, thousands of people arrived without a clue that they were in danger.”

Lawyer Alexander Klauser and Chairman of the Consumer Protection Union Peter Kolba and their client Ulrich Schopf wait for the opening of civil trial over a man's death from COVID-19 after holiday in Ischgl ski resort, in Vienna, Austria September 17, 2021.
Lawyer Alexander Klauser and Chairman of the Consumer Protection Union Peter Kolba and their client Ulrich Schopf wait for the opening of civil trial over a man’s death from COVID-19 after holiday in Ischgl ski resort in Austria on Sept. 17, 2021. REUTERS

An independent commission last year concluded that authorities in the Tyrol region acted too slowly to shut down ski resorts in the valley after it became clear they were dealing with one of Europe’s first coronavirus outbreaks in March. But the panel didn’t find evidence that political or business pressure played a role in the decisions.

Klauser, the lawyer, said that even after authorities issued a directive to close apres-ski bars it wasn’t enforced strongly enough.

“Open air mass gatherings which were forbidden according to the directive continued,” he said. “The police just watched on without doing anything.”