German police use force to break up virus rules protest
BERLIN — German police used water cannons and pepper spray Wednesday to disperse people protesting coronavirus restrictions in Berlin’s government district, after crowds ignored calls to wear masks and keep their distance from one another in line with pandemic regulations.
As water sprayed from the cannons rained down on protesters outside the Brandenburg Gate, police in riot gear moved through the crowd carrying away some participants. Some demonstrators threw fireworks, flares and other objects in response as police helicopters hovered overhead.
Officers avoided shooting the cannons directly at protesters because there were children in the crowd, and they worked slowly and methodically to disperse the crowd, Berlin police spokesman Thilo Cabiltz said. Some protesters popped open umbrellas and held their ground until they were eventually forced back.
More than 100 people were more temporarily detained. Nine police officers were injured. The protest crowd thinned significantly by late afternoon as many demonstrators marched back to the city’s main train station, chanting and blowing whistles.
One protester held a sign saying “Infection Protection Law = Dictatorship.”
The protests came as German lawmakers debated a bill that would provide legal underpinning for the government to issue social distancing rules, require masks in public, and to close stores and other venues to slow the spread of the virus.
The bill easily passed both the lower and upper houses of Germany’s parliament and was fast-tracked to the country’s president, who signed it later Wednesday.
While the virus-prevention measures are supported by most people in Germany, a vocal minority has staged regular rallies around the country, arguing that the restrictions are unconstitutional.
Germany has reported almost 854,000 coronavirus cases and more than 13,200 virus-related deaths in the pandemic accord
Health Minister Jens Spahn praised the efforts of German pharmaceutical company BioNTech, which together with Pfizer is leading the race to develop a vaccine against COVID-19. Spahn denied that vaccinations would be compulsory, a claim repeatedly made by those protesting against government measures.
German authorities took the rare step Tuesday of banning a series of protests directly outside the parliament building due to security concerns. Fencing was put up around a wide area that included the Bundestag, nearby parliamentary offices, the federal chancellery, and the presidential residence and offices.
Outside the metal cordons, protesters gathered early Wednesday by the Brandenburg Gate, and on streets and bridges. The demonstrators came from all walks of life and included families and students.
“Wewantour lives back,” read one sign carried by protesters.
One demonstrator held a flag of outgoing U.S. President Donald Trump and an image invoking the QAnon conspiracy theory