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Madrid wants military help, more doctors to fight virus wave

MADRID — Authorities in Madrid want to hire more doctors and get urgent help from Spain’s military and police to fight a second wave of coronavirus infections that might force them into expanding restrictions on free movement that are already controv
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MADRID — Authorities in Madrid want to hire more doctors and get urgent help from Spain’s military and police to fight a second wave of coronavirus infections that might force them into expanding restrictions on free movement that are already controversial.

The Spanish capital needs Spain's central government to relax regulations so it can hire 300 additional doctors from outside the European Union, regional vice-president Ignacio Aguado said Wednesday.

Madrid also wants central authorities to erect military tents as makeshift facilities to host virus testing, wants soldiers to disinfect public buildings and wants 222 national police deployed by Monday to help enforce quarantines and restrictions in hard-hit areas.

“The situation is not going well, neither in Spain nor in Madrid," Aguado told a press conference.

Madrid has seen rate of 772 infections per 100,000 inhabitants in 14 days, nearly three times the national average of 287. In contrast, the European average last week was 76 cases per 100,000 people over 14 days.

Nearly 860,000 Madrid residents are already required to justify trips out of 37 neighbourhoods, mostly working-class areas where locals have complained that the coronavirus restrictions are stigmatizing the poor.

But faced with a “sustained increase” of cases in the region of 6.6 million, according to its deputy health chief, Antonio Zapatero, the regional government is considering expanding those controls to other areas.

A final decision on new restrictions, including new possible limits on customers in restaurants, will be announced Friday, Zapatero told reporters.

Other areas in Spain are also seeing an increase in new virus cases. The country recorded 130 new virus deaths Wednesday, bringing its confirmed death toll to 31,034. Experts say all numbers understate the true toll of the pandemic, due to limited testing and missed cases.

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Follow AP’s pandemic coverage at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

Aritz Parra, The Associated Press