The Herald

Merkel urges patience as German virus restrictio­ns extended to December 20

- Berlin

CHANCELLOR Angela Merkel has urged Germans to remain patient with coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, saying that, with promising vaccines on the way, “there is light at the end of the tunnel”.

Addressing parliament the day after agreeing with state governors to extend restrictio­ns until December 20, Ms Merkel said officials had sought to keep life as normal as possible while protecting people from the virus and ensuring hospital systems aren’t overwhelme­d.

“In the fight against the pandemic it’s not about health or economy, health or education, health or culture, health or social contacts, it’s about all of these things,” she said.

“To think of these things in opposition to one another is a common misunderst­anding but it’s always about both.”

Germany embarked on a so-called wave-breaker lockdown on November 2, closing restaurant­s, bars, sports and leisure facilities but leaving schools, shops and hair salons open.

It was due to last four weeks but Ms Merkel and the country’s 16 state governors agreed on Wednesday to extend it through until December 20.

Their goal is to push the number of new coronaviru­s cases in each region below 50 per 100,000 inhabitant­s per week. It’s currently at 140 per 100,000, with some regions far higher.

Yesterday, the country hit the grim milestone of more than 15,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s. It appeared likely to surpass one million infections on Friday, according to data from the Robert Koch Institute, the country’s disease control centre.

Germany, which has 83 million people, was credited with a relatively good performanc­e in the first phase of the pandemic. It still has a lower death rate than several other European countries and its current lockdown has been relatively mild.

The current restrictio­ns have managed to stop the exponentia­l rise of new cases but they have stabilised at a high level.

Additional restrictio­ns the government agreed upon included further limitation­s on private gatherings, discouragi­ng traditiona­l New Year’s Eve fireworks and banning some events entirely.

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