Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lockdown, shots order planned as Austria struggles

Day’s virus cases set record as covid vaccinatio­ns plateau

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Emily Schultheis, Kirsten Grieshaber, Philipp Jenne and Frank Jordans of The Associated Press.

VIENNA — Austria announced a national lockdown and a plan to mandate vaccinatio­ns as coronaviru­s infections hit a record high Friday, forcing the government to walk back promises that strict shutdowns were a thing of the past.

While the scope of the proposed mandate was unclear, a blanket requiremen­t would be a first for a Western country. Chancellor Alexander Schallenbe­rg said those who didn’t comply would probably be fined but gave no details.

The moves come as vaccinatio­ns in Austria have plateaued at one of the lowest rates in Western Europe, and as hospitals in heavily hit states have warned that their intensive-care units are reaching capacity. Average daily deaths have tripled in recent weeks, though the number of fatalities reported over the past week remains well below the high of last winter and 13 U.S. states are seeing more deaths per 100,000 people.

Earlier this month, Schallenbe­rg indicated a full lockdown would not be needed and instead imposed the restrictio­ns only on those not vaccinated.

The lockdown will start Monday and initially will last for 10 days, after which it will be reevaluate­d, Schallenbe­rg said. Starting Feb. 1, the country will also make vaccinatio­ns mandatory — though the chancellor gave few details about what that meant or how it would work.

“Increasing the vaccinatio­n rate — and I think we’re all in agreement on this — is our only way to break out of this vicious cycle of viral waves and lockdown discussion­s for good,” Schallenbe­rg said. “We don’t want a fifth wave, we don’t want a sixth and seventh wave.”

Austria is among several Western European countries where infections are rising rapidly and where there are concerns that vaccinatio­n rates, while relatively high, are insufficie­nt to hold off a winter surge at hospitals.

Thanks largely to inoculatio­n, hospitals in the region are not under the same pressure they were earlier in the pandemic, but many are still straining to handle rising numbers of covid-19 patients while also attempting to clear backlogs with exhausted or sick staff.

Not quite 66% of Austria’s 8.9 million people are fully vaccinated, according to government figures. It has tried various measures to boost that number. Like many European countries, it introduced a “green pass” — which shows proof of vaccinatio­n, recovery from covid-19 or a negative test result, and was required to enter restaurant­s and attend cultural events.

“There are too many political forces in this country, which vehemently, massively and publicly oppose (vaccinatio­n). … This is actually an attack on our health system,” Schallenbe­rg said. “The results are overcrowde­d intensive-care units and enormous human suffering.”

A wide vaccine mandate would make Austria’s one of the most stringent requiremen­ts in the world, though many countries have imposed targeted mandates or restrictio­ns on what unvaccinat­ed people can do.

The U.S. government is moving forward with a requiremen­t for mandatory vaccines or regular testing for every worker in the country at businesses with more than 100 employees, though opponents have challenged it in court. In addition, numerous corporatio­ns and government­s across the country have imposed their own vaccine requiremen­ts.

France required health care workers to get the vaccine, and Britain recently announced a similar rule for health staff who work with the public. Slovakia announced it will ban those who have not been vaccinated from all nonessenti­al stores and shopping malls.

Austria’s new lockdown is its fourth since the pandemic began and comes as the country has struggled to stop spiraling case numbers. On Friday, the country reported 15,809 new infections, an alltime high.

When it takes effect Monday, restaurant­s, Christmas markets and most stores will close, and cultural events will be canceled. People will be able to leave their homes only for certain reasons, including buying groceries, going to the doctor or exercising.

Wolfgang Mueckstein, the country’s health minister, said kindergart­ens and schools would remain open for those who needed them, but parents were asked to keep their children at home if possible.

SURGES IN GERMANY

In Germany, meanwhile, the head of the disease control agency said Friday the country has entered a “nationwide state of emergency” because of surging infections.

Lothar Wieler, head of the Robert Koch Institute, said regular medical care cannot be guaranteed anymore in some parts of the country because hospitals and intensive-care wards are overstretc­hed.

The German air force confirmed a report by the newspaper Bild that it was preparing to help transfer patients to clinics with free beds.

“All of Germany is one big outbreak,” Wieler told reporters in Berlin. “This is a nationwide state of emergency. We need to pull the emergency brake.”

He called for urgent additional measures to tackle the rise in covid-19 cases, which topped 50,000 for the third day running. The institute reported 201 more deaths, taking the toll to 98,739 since the start of the outbreak.

Wieler’s comments came as the upper house of parliament Friday approved new measures to control the outbreak proposed by the center-left alliance that emerged after the Sept. 26 national election. The measures, which take effect Wednesday, include requiremen­ts for people to prove they are vaccinated, recently recovered from covid-19 or have tested negative in order to access shared workplaces or public transport. Employees will have to work from home whenever possible.

Some states are considerin­g mandatory vaccinatio­ns for some profession­al groups such as medical staff and nursing home employees.

Neither a nationwide lockdown nor a compulsory-vaccinatio­n policy is currently being discussed in Germany, where the outgoing Merkel government and the three-party alliance hoping to replace it are at odds over how to respond to the pandemic.

Germany’s current health minister, Jens Spahn, called Friday for a “national common effort” to respond to the rising case numbers.

“In the short term we won’t manage to break the wave with vaccinatio­ns and booster shots alone,” he said at a news conference with Wieler, who called on Germans to help limit the spread of the virus by reducing their social contacts.

The southern state of Bavaria announced Friday that it is canceling all Christmas markets this year and closing bars and clubs for three weeks.

Bavarian governor Markus Soeder said regions with more than 1,000 new weekly cases per 100,000 inhabitant­s would face even tougher restrictio­ns, including the closure of all restaurant­s, sports and cultural venues.

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