Drones to enforce coronavirus rules at Madrid cemeteries on All Saints' Day

Madrid city hall said Wednesday it will deploy drones at two of the largest cemeteries in the Spanish capital on All Saints' Day to ensure virus restrictions are respected.
Spanish families traditionally visit the graves of loved ones on the November 1st holiday but this year, capacity at cemeteries in Madrid has been reduced to half because of the pandemic.
Groups of visitors will be limited to no more than six and they must respect social distancing rules.
? El Ayuntamiento prepara medidas especiales en los cementerios municipales con motivo de la festividad de Todos los Santos.
➡️El aforo estará limitado a la mitad por lo que se recomienda espaciar las visitas durante todo el puente.
? https://t.co/WeEk52CBff pic.twitter.com/LZfwzAzv5e
— Ayuntamiento Madrid (@MADRID) October 28, 2020
To ensure people keep to the rules, up to 300 municipal police will be deployed daily at cemeteries in the Spanish capital over three days from October 30, city hall said. The figure is 20 percent higher than last year.
Officers will be backed up by drones at two of the city's largest cemeteries, one of which is La Almudena, where famous Spaniards like flamenco legend Lola Flores and Nobel-winning neuroscientist Santiago Ramon y Cajal are buried.
The other is the Carabanchel cemetery.
"We can't allow crowds to form either inside or outside" cemeteries on these days, Mayor Jose Luiz Martinez-Almeida told reporters.
It is not the first time Madrid police have deployed drones to enforce virus restrictions: when a national lockdown began in March, police used loudspeakers mounted on drones to tell people in parks and public spaces to go
home.
Last week, Spain became the first European Union nation to surpass one million confirmed Covid-19 infections, with the virus claiming more than 35,000 lives thus far.
READ ALSO:
-
MAP: These are the curfew hours across Spain
-
Q&A: What are the rules under Spain’s new state of emergency?
-
IN PICS: This is how All Saints' Day is celebrated in Madrid
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Spanish families traditionally visit the graves of loved ones on the November 1st holiday but this year, capacity at cemeteries in Madrid has been reduced to half because of the pandemic.
Groups of visitors will be limited to no more than six and they must respect social distancing rules.
? El Ayuntamiento prepara medidas especiales en los cementerios municipales con motivo de la festividad de Todos los Santos.
— Ayuntamiento Madrid (@MADRID) October 28, 2020
➡️El aforo estará limitado a la mitad por lo que se recomienda espaciar las visitas durante todo el puente.
? https://t.co/WeEk52CBff pic.twitter.com/LZfwzAzv5e
To ensure people keep to the rules, up to 300 municipal police will be deployed daily at cemeteries in the Spanish capital over three days from October 30, city hall said. The figure is 20 percent higher than last year.
Officers will be backed up by drones at two of the city's largest cemeteries, one of which is La Almudena, where famous Spaniards like flamenco legend Lola Flores and Nobel-winning neuroscientist Santiago Ramon y Cajal are buried.
The other is the Carabanchel cemetery.
"We can't allow crowds to form either inside or outside" cemeteries on these days, Mayor Jose Luiz Martinez-Almeida told reporters.
It is not the first time Madrid police have deployed drones to enforce virus restrictions: when a national lockdown began in March, police used loudspeakers mounted on drones to tell people in parks and public spaces to go
home.
Last week, Spain became the first European Union nation to surpass one million confirmed Covid-19 infections, with the virus claiming more than 35,000 lives thus far.
READ ALSO:
- MAP: These are the curfew hours across Spain
- Q&A: What are the rules under Spain’s new state of emergency?
- IN PICS: This is how All Saints' Day is celebrated in Madrid
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