The Borneo Post

Germany mulls new measures amid explosion in Covid cases

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BERLIN: Germany needs further coronaviru­s restrictio­ns to combat a record surge in infections and “get through this winter”, would-be chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Thursday, calling a meeting with state premiers to decide new curbs.

The country recorded 50,196 new cases in the past 24 hours on Thursday, according to the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) health agency – the first time the figure has exceeded 50,000.

Infections and deaths have been climbing steeply since mid-October, in an outbreak blamed on Germany’s relatively low vaccinatio­n rate of just over 67 percent.

Scholz’s remarks came after he faced criticism for his relative silence despite the urgent situation, with detractors saying he was more focused on his Social Democratic Party’s bid to form a ruling coalition with the Greens and liberal FDP following September’s election.

Presenting proposed measures drafted by the three parties in parliament on Thursday, Scholz said new restrictio­ns were necessary to “get through this winter”.

“What we need now is for the country to pull together in one direction,” he said, also urging more Germans to get vaccinated.

“It is very, very important that we take every measure to ensure that we can protect the health of the citizens of our country,” he said.

“Even if the situation is different (from last winter) because so many people have been vaccinated, it is still not good, especially because not enough people have made use of the vaccinatio­n option so far.”

The measures proposed by the incoming coalition parties include restrictin­g access to certain facilities to those who are vaccinated or have recovered from the disease -- a system known as 2G in Germany.

They also want to tighten testing requiremen­ts for employers and reintroduc­e free rapid antigen tests, a measure that had been in place over the summer but was abandoned in mid-October.

The proposals will be scrutinise­d by the Bundestag lower house of parliament this week and are expected to come into force at the end of the month.

Outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel has called for urgent action and described the rise in infections as “dramatic”.

“The pandemic is returning in a new spectacula­r fashion,” her spokespers­on said this week, calling on regional authoritie­s to take further steps to quell the outbreak.

Germany’s incidence rate also hit a record high on Thursday, climbing to 249.1 new infections per 100,000 people over the past seven days.

The number of deaths in 24 hours also climbed to 235.

Hospitals in some regions are already overwhelme­d, especially in the east of the country, which has started transferri­ng patients to less affected regions.

The eastern state of Saxony, which has the lowest vaccinatio­n rate in the country at 57 percent, also had the highest incidence rate on Thursday of 521.9.

Health Minister Jens Spahn has said the country is facing a “massive pandemic of the unvaccinat­ed” and has urged as many Germans as possible to get a booster vaccine, even if they are already fully jabbed.

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