Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: Hamburg to return to full lockdown

Germany's second-biggest city, Hamburg, is set to reimpose full lockdown measures after the seven-day incidence of COVID-19 cases there rose above 100 per 100,000 people. The city of Cologne is also tightening the rules.

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Steps to open up from the coronaviru­s lockdown, introduced at the start of last week, are to be reversed in the German city of Hamburg.

Mayor Peter Tschentsch­er said the return to a full lockdown would start on Saturday, after case numbers in the northern port city edged up.

The city — Germany's secondlarg­est — hit the brakes on easing lockdown after three days when its seven-day incidence rate rose above 100 cases per 100,000 residents.

On Friday, the incidence had risen to 108.6 cases. As of Saturday, the rules from before March 8 apply again.

"I fear that the situation will deteriorat­e further. We are in a strong third wave," Tschentsch­er said.

"We are dealing with a very contagious variant of the virus," he warned. "We are acting earlier — something we found to be very good in previous waves."

Cologne also toughens curbs

Germany's fourth largest city, Cologne, also announced a tightening of the corona requiremen­ts on Friday, although to a lesser extent than Hamburg. The incidence value in Cologne was just above the emergency brake value of 100 for the fifth day in a row.

From Monday, only surgical or FFP2 masks may be worn in outdoor zones where masks are

compulsory. Previously, ordinary cloth masks were also allowed in such areas.

There will also be a requiremen­t for a negative coroanviru­s test for visits to museums and zoos, as well as hairdresse­rs.

"I hope that we can avert a severe lockdown with our measures," Cologne Mayor Henriette Reker said.

Germany's third wave of infections

The news came as German Health Minister Jens Spahn has said that rising infection rates nationwide meant it may be impossible to ease restrictio­ns in the coming weeks.

The state of Brandenbur­g, the region surroundin­g Berlin, also crossed the 100 cases benchmark on Friday.

The more contagious B117 COVID-19 strain is believed to be behind the recent surge in cases across the country.

Chancellor Angela Merkel met with the country's 16 state leaders on Friday to hash out a plan to boost the country's vaccine campaign. On Monday, the leaders will meet again to set new lockdown rules based on the latest developmen­ts.

At the same time, Germany's Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases warned that case numbers were rising at a "very clearly exponentia­l rate."

"The infection process is gaining momentum," RKI Vice President Lars Schaade told reporters on Friday.

Germany behind on vaccinatio­ns

The health minister for the city state of Hamburg on Friday welcomed renewed authorizat­ion to administer the AstraZenec­a vaccine, saying that almost 23,000 vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts had been reschedule­d, the state website said.

By Friday, some 164,775 people in the state had been administer­ed at least one dose, with 75,606 people being fully vaccinated, according to the RKI.

The German government has been under continued pressure to speed up its vaccinatio­n drive, especially as cases begin to surge.

 ??  ?? The city has had three days with seven-day incidences above 100 cases per 100,000
The city has had three days with seven-day incidences above 100 cases per 100,000

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