The Scotsman

Austrian lockdown dampens holiday spirit in order to contain Covid-19

- By COLLEEN BARRY newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Austrians savoured a final mulled wine in packed Christmas markets before the curtain came down on the holiday season as it was just getting under way, plunging the country into its fourth lockdown of the pandemic.

The capital, Vienna, woke to the new restrictio­ns on Monday, with people heading in to work, taking children to school and exercising outdoors, more or less as usual.

This was not the draconian lockdown at the start of the pandemic in 2020, when movements were strictly monitored and discourage­d. Police cars circulated, in keeping with government promises to step up controls, but no spot checks were being made.

"I am particular­ly annoyed by the lockdown," Georg Huber, a lawyer on his way to work, said.

"One should have done more research in, I don't know, summer? One should have implemente­d a mandatory vaccinatio­n in the summer, when it turned out it would not be enough to hope that people get there without any coercion. I think the government just over slept ."

Austria has one of the lowest vaccinatio­n rates in western Europe, at around 66% of the population of 8.9 million people. There is a vocal minority who refuse to be inoculated.

The government announced the nationwide lockdown on Friday, as the average daily deaths tripled in recent weeks and hospitals in hard-hit states warned that intensive care units were at capacity.

The renewed restrictio­ns will be in place for at least 10 days, but are likely to be extended for a further 10, after which the government has indicated plans to open up so Austrians can celebrate Christmas normally. But restrictio­ns will remain in place for unvaccinat­ed people.

As of Monday, people can leave their homes only for specific reasons, including buying food, going to the doctor or exercising.

Nurseries and schools will remain open for those who need them, but parents were being asked to keep their children at home if possible.

Health minister Wolfgang Mueckstein said the lockdown was necessary to bring down the number of new daily infections, which had spiked at up to 15,000 a day, and to reduce the number of Covid patients in intensive care, currently running at 531.

Most of all, he said, it was needed to bring relief" to the people who work in this sector, the nurses and doctors who cannot take it anymore".

"It is a situation where we have to react now. The only way is with a lockdown, a relatively hard method, to lower the numbers with a wooden hammer ," Mr Mueckstein told national broadcaste­r ORF.

Political analysts say the government did not effectivel­y communicat­e the necessity of the vaccinatio­ns early enough, and that many Austrians did not take the campaign seriouslye­nough after former chancellor Sebastian Kurz declared the pandemic "over" last summer.

Mr Kurz was forced out in a corruption scandal last month, replaced by his foreign minister, Alexander Schallenbe­rg, who in less than a week expanded the controvers­ial lockdown on the un vaccinated to a lock down for everyone.

Mr Schallenbe­rg has also pledged to make vaccinatio­ns mandatory by February 1, with the details to be hammered out.

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