The Citizen (KZN)

Germany to shut schools, shops

COVID-19: INFECTION TREND HAS TAKEN ‘WORRYING TURN’ Implementa­tion of restrictio­n are in hands of individual states, regions.

- Berlin

Chancellor Angela Merkel was yesterday scheduled to hold crisis talks with regional leaders of Germany’s 16 states to agree tougher curbs including the closure of shops ahead of Christmas, as coronaviru­s infections surge unabated.

The drastic measures hitting shops other than those selling essential goods would be imposed from Wednesday until at least January 10, according to a draft by Merkel’s office.

Schools could also be shuttered, sending pupils into homeschool­ing, while companies are requested to allow employees to work from home during the period.

Bavaria state premier Markus Soeder, who has been pushing for tougher measures, voiced support for the measures.

“The numbers are worse than ever, we mustn’t allow ourselves to get bogged down by individual measures,” he told Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

Along with Merkel, Soeder has for weeks been seeking tougher restrictio­ns, warning that the current round of shutdowns hitting theatres, cinemas, gyms and indoor dining was not far-reaching enough.

But the implementa­tion of the restrictio­ns are in the hands of individual states, and some regions where infection levels were lower had been resistant to impose tough curbs.

The mood, however, tipped over in the last week after Germany recorded new daily death tolls reaching close to 600.

The country’s disease control agency chief Lothar Wieler warned on Thursday that the infections trend had taken a worrying turn.

“The rise in numbers is worrying,” said Robert Koch Institute president Wieler, warning that after plateauing for a few weeks, “the course of infections could tip over again” into exponentia­l growth.

Europe’s biggest economy has been severely hit by a second wave with daily new infections more than three times that of the peak in the spring. Germany recorded another 20 200 new cases in 24 hours, reaching a total of 1 320 716 cases, according to RKI data published yesterday. –

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