Hairdressers in Latvia are taking the unusual step of offering their services in snowy forests or on frozen lakes as they protest against COVID restrictions. "We cannot work otherwise," hairdresser Diana Silina told AFP as she prepared her equipment on the icy surface of a lake outside the capital Riga. Hairdressing and spa salons have been closed in Latvia since December 21 and outdoor contacts are limited to a maximum two people-so hairdressers are only taking one client at a time. "We don't know whether even this way is fully legal, but we must try, otherwise we have no income at all," Silina said.
The hairdresser said her boyfriend was supporting her financially and did not want her to risk a 500-euro ($600) fine. A supporter of the initiative, Riga city councilor Ieva Brante, has also posted a video of herself having her hair done in the middle of a forest where she said there would be no police patrols. "Being a lawyer, I support people finding legal ways around regulations, if that allows them to work and earn their living," she said on Facebook.
Brante's hairdresser Zane Melnace was quoted by Polish media as saying that she was calling the sessions "outdoor training" to circumvent the rules. "I want to work! Officially! And now! Not in three weeks, two months or maybe another half a year! I can't wait any longer, because the monthly payments for the apartment and the loan have to be made now," she said. Brante told AFP that after posting the video she was contacted by the police but had not received a fine.
During a government meeting, Health Minister Daniels Pavluts also reportedly signaled his tacit support for the initiative, saying: "Getting your hair done in the forest is absolutely OK!" But two professional associations representing beauticians and hairdressers are threating to sue the government in the Constitutional Court if their work is not allowed to resume in some form. "The decision to ban our services was taken without consulting us and without statistics which would show that hairdressing spreads COVID-19," the associations' leaders Sabine Ulberte and Renate Reinsone wrote in a statement.
Their move follows a similar lawsuit launched by the Book Publishers Association which led to the reopening of bookshops in Latvia earlier this week, after no proof was found to link in-person visits to bookshops with coronavirus infections. Parliament will hold a special session on the issue after 10,000 signatures were collected for a petition to allow hairdressers and other beauty professionals to resume work. - AFP