From DW:
“Germany
imposes strict lockdown over Easter”
"We are in
a new pandemic" due to the spread of coronavirus variants, Chancellor
Angela Merkel has said. German federal and state leaders have agreed on a
radical shutdown over the Easter holidays. Germany is extending the current
lockdown through to April 18, Chancellor Angela Merkel announced early Tuesday.
The country will enter an even stricter lockdown from April 1 to April 5 over
the Easter holiday period, when shops, including grocery stores, will largely
have to close. Merkel warned that Germany needed to "break the exponential
growth of the third wave." Case numbers have reached levels that
authorities say will overburden intensive care units. Tuesday's announcement
marks a reversal from earlier this month when state leaders agreed to begin a
cautious reopening process. Talks between leaders of Germany's 16 federal
states and Merkel lasted until the early hours of the morning following a
lengthy interruption.
What are the
new measures? As well as prolonging existing measures such as the closure
of cultural, leisure and sporting facilities, tougher restrictions will apply
over the Easter period. Churches will be asked to hold services marking
the Christian festival online. No more than five adults from two
households will be able to meet over the five-day period. Testing and
vaccination centers can remain open. Public gatherings will be
prohibited. Almost all shops will be shut during the five days. Only
grocery stores may open on Saturday, April 3. Anyone from Germany
holidaying abroad will have to be tested before boarding a flight back to
Germany. This "emergency brake" will halt further reopenings
and will apply to areas exceeding 100 new cases per 100,000 inhabitants over a
seven-day period. If an area has an incidence rate of over 100 for three
consecutive days, harsher lockdown measures will once again apply.
What did
Merkel say? "We are in a very, very serious situation" due to the
spread of coronavirus variants in the country, Merkel told the press
conference. "What we have is essentially a new pandemic," she
said. The new virus is "significantly more deadly, significantly more
infectious." "It really makes you a bit wistful about what we
could have already achieved," Merkel said, adding that the mutated virus
has now "basically eaten up" earlier gains. Germany would have
to be "prudent and flexible" and was in a "race against
time" to vaccinate its population, she said. Patrick Sensburg, a
member of the German parliament from Merkel's governing CDU party, told DW that
it was a tough decision for politicians to extend Germany's lockdown until
April 18. "We are quite close to the Easter holidays, and a lot of
people wanted to go on holidays. So for political leaders, it was quite hard to
tell people 'no,'" Sensburg said. "This was not an easy
decision, but in the end, the numbers are too high in Germany," he said.
What state
leaders said "We are having a de facto Easter lockdown," Bavarian
State Premier Markus Söder told reporters. The goal is to take the speed out of
the virus, he said. "We are probably now living in the most
dangerous phase of the pandemic," Söder added, saying that many people
underestimate the situation. He cautioned that impatience should not
become Germany's weakness. Governing Mayor of Berlin Michael Müller said
it was important to win time until the vaccine becomes available. Tuesday's
decision represented a "paradigm shift" on how to proceed in the
pandemic, he said. "It is no longer just about restrictions, it is no
longer just about 'open — close, open — close.'" Stephan Weil,
Lower Saxony's state premier, backed the measures as he spoke of "five
days of hard lockdown over Easter." "Firms should not produce
anything, traveling to work should only take place when it is absolutely
necessary. Public life in Germany and human interactions should be reduced to the
absolute minimum. A short but consequent phase of stillstand can break and
dampen the infection wave," Weil said.
'Doubt' over
length of Easter shutdown For some experts, the lockdown measures agreed
might not be enough to put a dent in the rising COVID cases across Germany. "I
doubt it a little bit," Tobias Kurth, the director of the Institute of
Public Health and Epidemiology at Berlin's Charité Hospital, told DW. He
noted that the government's plan to curb shop openings and discourage social
contacts over the Easter holidays isn't that much different than what would
have normally taken place over those five days. He urged for a stronger
rapid testing regimen to be in place before officials consider relaxing
restrictions again. "I think a strict lockdown would work, but we
opened up … without a clear concept of rapid testing or not having enough rapid
testing available," Kurth said.
A full
lockdown 'won't work' Professor Andrew Ullmann, spokesman for the German
parliament's health committee, told DW he believes that a full lockdown, such
as that enforced in early 2020 during the first wave "won't work" due
to general lockdown fatigue in the population. "What I'm really
concerned about is that we are running from one lockdown to the next lockdown
with any with no perspective for our population," added Ullman, who is
also a trained physician and lawmaker for Germany's pro-business Free
Democratic Party.
Infection
rate quickly rising According to Germany's Robert Koch Institute for
infectious diseases (RKI), the seven-day incidence rate stood at 107 on Monday,
above the 100 threshold at which hospitals often become overwhelmed. Health
authorities warned last week that coronavirus case numbers are rising at a
"very clearly exponential rate." The number of confirmed cases
in Germany on Monday increased by 7,709 to 2,667,225, while the death toll rose
by 50 to 74,714. Ugur Sahin, whose firm developed one of the world's
first coronavirus vaccines, believes Europe will have the pandemic under
control by the end of this summer. It comes amid criticism of the EU's
vaccination drive.
^ It seems that
European countries: the UK, Spain, Italy, France, Germany, etc. are constantly
in a major lockdown and yet there is little to no end in sight for the
infections and deaths over there. Only the UK has a good working Vaccine
program and so the UK will probably be better off then the other countries.
Pretty soon even the average person in these countries will get fed-up with the
constant chaos and lockdowns and will stop following the laws and restrictions.
Theses countries have little time to waste to vaccinate as many of their people
as they can before that happens. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-imposes-strict-lockdown-over-easter/a-56948895
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