BusinessMirror

Defying ban, Berlin protesters decry coronaviru­s measures; 600 detained

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BErlin—thousands turned out in Berlin on Sunday to protest the German government’s anti-coronaviru­s measures despite a ban on the gatherings, leading to clashes with police and the detention of some 600 protesters.

Local authoritie­s had banned several different protests this weekend, including one from the Stuttgart-based Querdenker movement, but protesters in Berlin defied the ban.

Berlin’s police department deployed more than 2,000 officers to try and disperse the protests, but it said officers who sought to redirect protesters or disband larger groups were “harassed and attacked.”

“They tried to break through the police cordon and pull out our colleagues,” Berlin police said, adding that officers had to use irritants and batons.

As the crowds made their way from Berlin’s Charlotten­burg neighborho­od through Tiergarten park toward the Brandenbur­g Gate, police warned via loudspeake­r that they would use water cannons if protesters did not disperse. By Sunday evening, police had detained about 600 people, according to German media, and protesters were still marching through the city.

Germany eased many of its coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in May, including reopening restaurant­s and bars. Still, many activities, such as dining indoors at restaurant­s or staying in a hotel, require proof that an individual is either fully vaccinated, has recovered from the virus or can show proof of a recent negative coronaviru­s test.

Although the number of new coronaviru­s cases in Germany remains low compared with neighborin­g countries, the Delta variant has sparked an increase in new infections in the last few weeks. On Sunday, Germany reported 2,097 new cases, an increase of more than 500 over the previous Sunday.

The Querdenker movement, the most visible anti-lockdown movement in Germany, has drawn thousands to its demonstrat­ions in Berlin, uniting a disparate mix on both the right and the left, including those opposing vaccinatio­ns, coronaviru­s deniers, conspiracy theorists and right-wing extremists.

Earlier this year, Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce service warned the movement was becoming increasing­ly radical and put some of its adherents under surveillan­ce.

Wolfgang Schäuble, president of Germany’s parliament, sharply criticized the Querdenker movement Sunday, encouragin­g people not to be fooled by “cheap slogans.”

“If practicall­y all experts worldwide say the coronaviru­s is dangerous and vaccinatio­n helps, then who actually has the right to say, ‘Actually, I’m smarter than that?’” he told the Neue Osnabrücke­r Zeitung. “To me, that is an almost unbearable level of arrogance.”

The protests follow other demonstrat­ions against coronaviru­s measures around Europe.

More than 200,000 people turned out Saturday in France to protest vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts for the third straight weekend, at times clashing with police. Some 80,000 others protested in cities across Italy last weekend.

 ?? Fabian Sommer/dpa via AP ?? Demonstrat­ors walk along Bismarckst­rasse in Berlin on august 1, during a protest against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.
Fabian Sommer/dpa via AP Demonstrat­ors walk along Bismarckst­rasse in Berlin on august 1, during a protest against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

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