Muscat Daily

German Chancellor for mandatory vaccinatio­n

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Frankfurt, Germany - German Chancellor Olaf Scholz insisted on Friday that his plan to introduce mandatory coronaviru­s jabs was on track, despite fierce debate about the controvers­ial move and growing resistance from his own coalition partners.

Scholz, who recently took over as chancellor from Angela Merkel, in late November touted compulsory jabs for all adults as the surest way out of the pandemic.

The centre-left Social Democrat asked MPs in the lower of house parliament to draft the necessary legislatio­n with the goal of introducin­g the measure in ‘late February or early March’.

Little progress has been made since then however, and the fast-spreading but less severe Omicron strain has raised fresh doubts about the project, particular­ly among the probusines­s FDP party.

Speaking after a meeting with the leaders of Germany’s 16 states on tighter coronaviru­s curbs, Scholz reiterated that ‘it would be good if we ended up with a general vaccine mandate’.

He said all of Germany’s state premiers had declared their backing for the plan.

“I feel fully supported [by them],” he said.

The same cannot be said for the FDP, who along with the Greens make up Scholz’s threeway coalition government.

Although coronaviru­s cases are rising, Germany has so far been spared the steep Omicron surge that has swept other nations - prompting Justice Minister Marco Buschmann from the FDP to call for a wait-andsee approach on a general vaccine mandate.

FDP chief Christian Lindner said new findings ‘could play a role in the decision’, in a nod to Omicron infecting even the

OLAF SCHOLZ

triple jabbed, and studies suggesting a lower hospitalis­ation rate than with the Delta variant.

“Protecting human health and life is highly desirable. But our greatest asset... is and remains our freedom,” he said on Thursday.

Germany’s first parliament­ary debate on compulsory jabs is only scheduled for late January, even though Scholz himself had originally aimed to have lawmakers discuss the issue before 2021 was out.

‘The longer the discussion about mandatory vaccinatio­ns lasts... the more the project wobbles,’ wrote Sueddeutsc­he newspaper.

Hundreds, at times thousands, of protesters have taken to the streets to rail against the government’s COVID-19 approach and vaccine plan in recent weeks, occasional­ly resulting in clashes with police.

Austrian example

With just over 71 per cent of the population double jabbed, Germany has a lower coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n rate than France, Italy or Spain.

Almost 42 per cent of Germans have had their booster shot, considered crucial in the fight against Omicron.

Like several other countries, Germany has already announced vaccine mandates for those in certain profession­s, including soldiers and health workers.

Neighbouri­ng Austria has gone further and is on the verge of introducin­g a general vaccine mandate, in what could be the first in Europe. While it has stirred controvers­y there too, the measure is backed by all the political parties except Austria's far-right FPOe.

“Compulsory vaccinatio­n will come, all experts agree on the high protective effect also against Omicron and hospitalis­ations,” said Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Paediatric­ian Steffen Lueder jokes with children using an oversized syringe during a vaccinatio­n drive in Berlin, on Saturday
(AFP) Paediatric­ian Steffen Lueder jokes with children using an oversized syringe during a vaccinatio­n drive in Berlin, on Saturday
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