The Guardian (USA)

EU tells six countries to lift Covid border restrictio­ns

- Daniel Boffey in Brussels

Brussels has put six EU member states on notice that their tight Covid border restrictio­ns, including exit and entry bans, should be lifted over fears of a wider breakdown in the bloc’s free movement of people and goods.

Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary and Sweden have been given 10 days to respond to the European commission’s concerns that they have breached commonly agreed coronaviru­s guidelines.

Restrictio­ns imposed by Germany at its border with the Austrian Tirol region have been a particular cause of tension in recent weeks, with the German ambassador in Vienna summoned to justify the “unnecessar­y measures that do more harm than good”.

There are concerns in Germany, however, that the country could be heading into a third wave of infection, with the number of cases per 100,000 residents in the last seven days at 60.5 – up from 55-57 the previous week.

The commission published its guidelines in January recommendi­ng EU member states keep open their borders and only “strongly discourage” non-essential travel, with the option of imposing testing and quarantine requiremen­ts on travellers from areas with high levels of infection.

The commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, a former German minister, has said she is determined to avoid a repeat of the early months of the pandemic when a series of unilateral decisions caused chaos at the borders and threatened supply chains.

But in recent weeks, stricter controls have been applied by the six countries targeted by the EU’s executive branch, in what a commission spokesman said presented a clear risk to the functionin­g of the single market in goods and people.

“We underline the need for free movement restrictio­ns to be non-discrimina­tory and proportion­ate, and we urge member states to align their provisions, more closely with the commission recommenda­tions that we have jointly agreed, and review [their] rules on free movement,” a commission spokesman said.

The contentiou­s new border controls include a broad ban on non-essential travel imposed by the government­s of Belgium and Sweden and the selective entry restrictio­ns enforced by the German government on traffic from Austria’s Tirol region, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

Currently only German citizens, foreign residents and essential workers are allowed to cross the border.

On Tuesday, Austria’s chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, tweeted a call for “common standards for travel and the transport of goods within the EU to ensure the functionin­g of the single market”.

“It is a necessity to go back to a coordinate­d approach to all the measures taken in relations with the free movement of people and goods in the European Union,” the EU commission­er for justice, Didier Reynders, a former Belgian minister, said.

Germany’s Europe minister, Michael Roth, insisted his government needed to act due to its exposure as “a transit country in the middle of the European Union”.

He said: “I reject the accusation that we have not complied with EU law … These measures obviously put a massive strain on border regions, commuters and the transport of goods and the single market, but the protection of our citizens is paramount.”

The restrictio­ns on the German-Austrian border were enforced earlier this month over concern at the high incidence in the Czech Republic and Tirol of the newer more infectious coronaviru­s variant first identified in the UK.

A commission spokesman said: “We trust that we will find solutions with member states concerns without having to revert to legal steps, which can be lengthy. So, member states have now 10 days to reply and we will then take it from there.”

 ?? Photograph: Lennart Preiss/ Getty Images ?? German border police speak to bus passengers seeking to enter the country from the Austrian Tirol last week.
Photograph: Lennart Preiss/ Getty Images German border police speak to bus passengers seeking to enter the country from the Austrian Tirol last week.

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