What's Happening: Coronavirus hurts handshakes, elections, Louvre
Fear of the coronavirus is changing habits in Germany, where it's common for people to shake hands at every meeting. Arriving for a meeting with migrant groups Monday morning, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was rebuffed by her interior minister, ...

Here's a look at some of the latest developments:
MERKEL SNUBBED
Fear of the coronavirus is changing habits in Germany, where it's common for people to shake hands at every meeting. Arriving for a meeting with migrant groups Monday morning, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was rebuffed by her interior minister, Horst Seehofer, when she stretched out her hand to greet him. France's government is telling people to scale back on handshakes - and even on the ubiquitous cheek kiss. In Italy, Europe's epicentre of the virus, authorities are conflicted about curtailing a cheek-kissing ritual that's rooted in Italy's Mediterranean culture as well as its strong family and social structure.
HIGH-TECH MASKS
Japanese electronics maker Sharp is now turning its expertise to mask making. Amid worldwide shortages of surgical and other masks because of the virus, Sharp Corp. will start making 150,000 masks a day at a plant that usually makes electronics displays. Other companies are changing their practices to adapt too. Nike temporarily shut down its European headquarters in the Netherlands after an employee tested positive for the new coronavirus, It is carrying out a deep clean of the campus, "out of an abundance of caution."
LONELY MONA LISA
VOTING AMID THE VIRUS
Democracy, too, is being disrupted by the virus. As Israelis vote Monday to decide the fate of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, authorities had to set up 15 special balloting stations for hundreds of Israelis who have been ordered to remain in home-quarantine after possible exposure to the virus. Fears of virus spreading may hinder turnout, already threatened by voter fatigue as they face their third election in less than a year. And in France, two mayors have come down with the virus as campaigning heats up for nationwide municipal elections this month.
PANIC IN THE BALTICS
A Lithuanian man locked his wife in a bathroom out of fears she had the coronavirus, after she met with a Chinese woman who had arrived from Italy. The man's wife called police, who rushed to the apartment in the capital Vilnius. The man said he had locked her up after "consulting on the phone with doctors" on how to avoid infection, according to local police. He wasn't arrested though, and the woman didn't press charges. She did get tested, just in case, and came out negative. So far Lithuania has only reported one case.
CHINA SEES LIGHT AT TUNNEL'S END
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.