From the DW:
“German
lockdown: Merkel announces tough new COVID curbs”
Chancellor
Angela Merkel has said stores, schools and day care centers will close in the
run-up to Christmas. The new rules, agreed with Germany's 16 state leaders,
will come into effect from Wednesday. Chancellor Angela Merkel has announced
that most stores in Germany will shut from Wednesday, along with schools and
day care centers. The new restrictions will be in effect until at least January
10 to help tackle the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, which threatens
to overwhelm the country's health system. In a news conference that followed a
meeting of federal and state leaders on Sunday, she said the country urgently
needed to address the exponential rise in COVID-19 infections. The decision is
set to cause a major disruption for retailers, the education system and the
public in the lead-up to the Christmas holidays.
What do the
new restrictions consist of? All nonessential shops and services will close
until January 10, including hairdressers which remained open under the current
lockdown "lite." Schools are urged to send students home and
continue lessons online, as well as extend the winter break until January 10.
Day care centers will also close, but parents will be able to take paid
holidays in order to look after their children. Employers are encouraged
to allow employees to work from home. People will not be allowed to
drink alcohol in public. Religious events in churches, synagogues and
mosques may take place if they follow hygiene rules, but communal singing is
not allowed. States still plan to ease stricter contact restrictions for
December 24 to 26 so that close family members can spend Christmas together — a
household may, during this time, invite up to four adults from other households
but only from the immediate family, plus any number of children under 14. People
may not purchase fireworks for New Year's Eve. The chancellor also
recommended that families who are planning to meet up should isolate for a week
beforehand to be safe.
What do the
new rules aim to achieve? "The measures which we began on November 2
have not been enough," Merkel said in a statement after the meeting. "The
health system is under heavy strain and our aim has always been to avoid an
overloading of the health care system," Merkel said. The goal of
the new measures is to bring down the infection rate so that authorities can
carry out contact tracing once again — the high number of infections made
contact tracing impossible. An acceptable infection rate for this would
be 50 cases per 100,000 residents. Although the government has agreed to impose
the new measures until January 10, they may be further extended if the case
numbers fail to come down. On Sunday, Germany's Robert Koch Institute,
which monitors infectious diseases, reported 20,200 new infections and 321
fatalities. The number is less than Friday's record of 29.875 cases. Germany's
intensive care unit capacity is also at a critical level, and doctors have
warned that only 5% to 10% of intensive care beds are available in some parts
of the country.
Harsher
lockdown possible Hans Brandt, a DW reporter in Berlin, explained the
relevance of the speedy decision that the government and heads of Germany's 16
states made. "It was somewhat surprising that they agreed so
quickly," Brandt said. "The whole meeting took just over an hour. We
have been used to these discussions between the central government and the
regional leaders dragging on for hours and hours, often with acrimonious
discussions." The meeting over the new restrictions was shorter
than previous meetings over coronavirus regulations had been. Brandt
described the shutting down of retail shops during the peak of Christmas
shopping as "a very drastic measure." He said the new rules
did not equate to the harshest possible lockdown and people had some leeway.
"A stricter lockdown is still conceivable since there is no rule that
people have to stay at home," Brandt said. "It's still only an
appeal." Brandt said Merkel had been pushing for a stricter
lockdown for a while and would be satisfied with the decision. Germany's
finance minister, Olaf Scholz, who was also present at the meeting, promised
financial support for businesses and individuals affected by the stricter
measures. It remains unclear how exactly the government would support
businesses, Brandt said, "but we know that the volume will be somewhere
between €10 and €12 billion ($12.1-14.5 billion) every month" for
businesses and self-employed people who cannot work because of the
restrictions. "Companies, the self-employed and freelancers who are
affected by closures from December 16, will receive financial support,"
according to a Twitter post by the Finance Ministry. "That means improved
bridging aid — subsidies for fixed costs, better conditions and higher monthly
grants up to a maximum of €500,000."
^ My German
friends saw this coming. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/german-lockdown-merkel-announces-tough-new-covid-curbs/a-55921912
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