Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Germany restricted travel from a region of France because of coronaviru­s variant cases.

Region suffers rise in variant cases, spurring test requiremen­t

- By Frank Jordans

BERLIN — Germany announced Sunday that travelers from France’s northeaste­rn Moselle region will face additional restrictio­ns because of the high rate of variant coronaviru­s cases there.

Germany’s disease control agency, the Robert Koch Institute, said it would add Moselle to the list of “variant of concern” areas that already includes countries such as the Czech Republic, Portugal, the United Kingdom and parts of Austria.

Travelers from those areas must produce a recent negative coronaviru­s test before entering Germany.

The Moselle region in northeaste­rn France includes the city of Metz and borders the German states of Saarland and Rhineland-palatinate.

Clement Beaune, the French minister for European affairs, said France regrets the decision and is in talks with Germany to try to lighten the measures for 16,000 inhabitant­s of Moselle who work across the border. He said France does not want them to face the daily PCR virus tests that Germany has applied elsewhere to travelers along some borders.

“We don’t want that,” he said. Beaune said France is pushing for the use of easier, faster testing methods and for tests every two to three days rather than daily.

The weekly rate of new infections in Moselle, at more than 300 per 100,000 people, is well above the average for France’s eastern region and the national average. In Germany, the number of cases per week stands at almost 64 per 100,000 inhabitant­s.

The Robert Koch Institute recorded 7,890 newly confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Germany over the past day, taking the total to over 2.4 million cases. The death toll rose by 157 to 70,045.

German officials have warned that virus variants such as the one first detected in Britain — known as B.1.1.7 — could spread more easily and fuel the infection rate at a time when Germany is slowly relaxing its lockdown measures.

“There are two trains rushing toward each other,” said Karl Lauterbach, an epidemiolo­gist and lawmaker with the center-left Social Democrats.

He called for Germany to prioritize giving as many people as possible an initial vaccine dose, as some other countries have done, including with the Astrazenec­a shot currently reserved for those under 65.

Bavaria’s governor, Markus Soeder, also urged a change to the way the Astrazenec­a shot is used. The vaccine has been shunned by many hoping to get the shot made by German company Biontech and Pfizer, or a similar one made by U.S. firm Moderna.

Soeder said Sunday it was “an absurd situation” that many who want to get vaccinated can’t, while those who can don’t want to.

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