Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

As variant surges, Germany’s drop in virus cases is flattening

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BERLIN — The head of Germany’s disease control agency warned Friday that a decline in new coronaviru­s infections the country saw has leveled off, while the share of cases involving more contagious variants is rising.

Robert Koch Institute President Lothar Wieler said Germany may be heading toward another “turning point” after weeks of falling infections.

“The decline of recent weeks doesn’t appear to be continuing,” Wieler told reporters in Berlin, noting that in one German state —

Thuringia — weekly case numbers are on the rise again.

His agency reported 9,113 new COVID-19 infections in the past day and 508 more virus-related deaths. Germany has recorded almost

2.4 million confirmed infections and 67,206 deaths from the coronaviru­s.

The number of new infections reported each week per 100,000 inhabitant­s has fallen to just under 57. Dozens of counties have posted infection rates below 35 per 100,000, which the government has said is the level at which certain lockdown measures could be lifted.

But no German state as a whole has achieved that threshold. Thuringia’s rate stands at almost 117 new cases per 100,000 inhabitant­s in a week.

The trend comes as several German states prepare to reopen elementary schools and kindergart­ens next week, a move criticized by some teachers’ unions that say there are insufficie­nt measures to protect students and staff members.

Wieler stressed that the hygiene policies developed for schools need to be put into practice.

“We have about 8 million students in Germany and almost 700,000 teachers,” he said. “The safety plans that exist (…) must be implemente­d. That’s the preconditi­on for opening elementary schools and kindergart­ens.”

German Health Minister Jens Spahn expressed concern about the rising share of more contagious virus variants among known infections.

This week, he said the variant first detected in Britain accounts for 22 percent of the cases in Germany, up from 6 percent two weeks ago.

Spahn told reporters in Berlin on Friday that the government wants to double the number of vaccinatio­ns in the coming weeks, from about 140,000 per day at present.

Members of the Republican Assembly caucus, appearing together Thursday to outline legislativ­e priorities, complained about having to move the event outdoors due to indoor gathering restrictio­ns.

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