Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: Germany reports record cases at nearly 30,000

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Germany has recorded nearly 30,000 new coronaviru­s cases and 598 new deaths over the past 24 hours. The COVID-19 infection rate has hit a record for the second day in a row.

Germany added 29,875 new coronaviru­s infections and 598 deaths from Thursday to Friday, according to the country's disease control agency, the Robert

Koch Institute (RKI).

The soaring number of cases and deaths is the highest ever recorded in a 24-hour period in Germany since the pandemic began. The total case number now stands at over 1,270,000 and the death toll is 20,970.

It is the second day in a row that case numbers hit a record and the second time in two days that the country saw almost 600 daily deaths.

Germany's top disease control official on Thursday described the situation as "extremely fragile."

RKI President Lothar Wieler said while cases had plateaued for a spell, they were now in fact rising and risk returning to exponentia­l growth.

Second wave rages on

Germany imposed a second partial lockdown, dubbed lockdown light, on November 2.

The stronger curbs forced restaurant­s and bars to close, people were advised to work from home again and unnecessar­y travel was strongly discourage­d.

However, the measures have failed to stem the second wave of the pandemic and the number of new cases has exceeded 15,000 for 29 of the last 40 days.

Local health authoritie­s have long been unable to track chains of infection due to the sheer number of cases.

Meanwhile, intensive care units are filling up and hospitals in some regions are at capacity.

Dr. Tobias Kurth, an epidemiolo­gist and director of the Cha

rité Institute of Public Health in Berlin, told DW the rise was "alarming" and that Germany now "had to go into a hard lockdown."

"We cannot afford to wait until after Christmas," he said. "If you travel across the country to see your family members, you put people at risk of getting sick and of eventually dying. We cannot afford this."

German leaders discuss lockdown

Chancellor Angela Merkel is tipped to meet with the leaders of the 16 federal states over the weekend to discuss a stricter nationwide response, including imposing tougher restrictio­ns on public life.

Merkel pleaded with Germans in a speech on Wednesday to reduce contacts and take additional precaution­s.

"If we now, just before Christmas, have too many contacts and this ends up being the

last Christmas with the grandparen­ts, then we will have failed in a sense. We should not do this," she said.

Germany was widely praised for its handling of the first wave of the health crisis, and saw a much lower death toll than its

European neighbors. But now ministers are comparing their efforts with those of France, which has succeeded in reducing the spread.

"This time France did everything right and achieved impressive successes, while in Ger

many, unfortunat­ely, the momentum of the second wave has still not been broken," Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said in comments to Germany's Handelsbla­tt newspaper and France's Les Echos.

Doctors sign up for vaccine

drive

Meanwhile, more than 10,000 doctors are interested in working at centers being set up nationwide to administer the coronaviru­s vaccine, according to a report published by the Funke media group on Friday.

The report cited a survey of health insurance associatio­ns.

Health Minister Jens Spahn expects that the first doses will be ready by January at the latest.

Vaccines are to be distribute­d via almost 30 delivery points across the country via regional vaccinatio­n centers, for which halls, stadiums and hotels are being prepared.

The deputy head of the National Associatio­n of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (KBV), Stephan Hofmeister has called for the vaccinatio­n drive to move to doctors' clinics from the centers as soon as enough doses are available.

mm, wmr/rt (AP, AFP)

 ??  ?? Germany's intensive care units (ICUs) are filling up with COVID patients and some regions are at capacity
Germany's intensive care units (ICUs) are filling up with COVID patients and some regions are at capacity

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