Oman Daily Observer

Merkel faces growing criticism over virus strategy

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been praised at home and abroad for her reaction to the coronaviru­s crisis, but as voices of discontent grow louder, support for the government’s strategy could be on the wane. Though Germany began to lift lockdown measures last week, Merkel has urged caution and slammed growing impatience to shake off the curbs on public life introduced a month ago to slow contagion.

The measures have proved successful so far, with Germany maintainin­g a mortality rate of just 3.7 per cent in the pandemic, far lower than major European neighbours.

The restrictio­ns have also met with public approval. Almost three quarters of the population said they supported them in a Kantar poll published on Friday.

In full-blown crisis just a few months ago, Merkel’s CDU/CSU conservati­ve alliance has meanwhile rebounded in the polls, jumping ten points in the last two weeks to 38 per cent.

Yet the mood could be about to change. Wolfgang Schaeuble, an elder statesman of German politics and current president of the Bundestag lower house, warned that extended restrictio­ns would impinge on fundamenta­l citizens’ rights.

“When I hear that protecting lives should come above everything else, I don’t think that is absolutely true,” he told Berlin daily Der Tagesspieg­el on Sunday.

Merkel also provoked the ire of regional leaders when she suggested last week that they had been too eager to relax restrictio­ns.

Armin Laschet, state premier for Germany’s most populous region North-rhine Westphalia and a candidate to succeed Merkel as CDU leader, protested that the discussion over how to lift lockdown measures was “appropriat­e”. “It is of course still a question of life and death,” he told public broadcaste­r ARD on Sunday night.

Yet he insisted that the negative effects of lockdown must also be “weighed up”, pointing in particular to children “who have had to stay at home for the last six weeks”.

He also attacked what he saw as the pessimisti­c prediction­s of some medical experts, pointing out that “40 per cent of intensive care beds are empty” in his state.

Germany’s most popular newspaper Bild echoed Laschet’s words in a scathing editorial on Monday, accusing Merkel of being “stubborn, pig-headed and bossy”.

Largely muted in the crisis until now, Germany’s opposition parties are also beginning to grow more critical of the government’s course.

The Greens, still the highest polling opposition party despite a recent slump, have urged more caution. On Sunday, co-leader Annalena Baerbock slammed plans to allow Bundesliga football to resume without spectators from next month.

The leader of the liberal FDP Christian Lindner warned that consensus over coronaviru­s measures was breaking down, declaring the “end of national unity”.

His party’s concern over both the fate of small and medium-sized businesses, as well as the erosion of civil liberties, is also shared by more extreme groups.

Far left and far right protesters have assembled in Berlin every Saturday in recent weeks, calling for “democratic resistance” against what they claim are authoritar­ian and unconstitu­tional coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Police arrested around 100 of an estimated 1,000 protesters last Saturday and a further demonstrat­ion is planned for May 1.

The far-right AFD, Germany’s largest opposition party by number of MPS, has also declared its opposition to lockdown.

“The absolute shutdown was avoidable and (the government) is now missing a chance to end it,” claimed AFD lawmaker Sebastian Muenzenmai­er, adding that “all shops must be opened: give the people back their liberty!”.

Weekly newspaper Die Zeit warned the AFD could “profit from the long term consequenc­es” of the virus such as mass unemployme­nt.

Though Germany began to lift lockdown measures last week, Merkel has urged caution and slammed growing impatience to shake off the curbs on public life introduced a month ago to slow contagion

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