Angela Merkel Throws Germany into ‘Lockdown Light’ to Slow Virus

Merkel
OLIVIER HOSLET/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

BERLIN (AP) — German officials agreed Wednesday to a four-week shutdown of restaurants, bars, theaters and other leisure facilities in an effort to curb a rapid rise in coronavirus infections, opting for decisive action to prevent an “acute national health emergency,” Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

The new restrictions, widely dubbed a “lockdown light,” are set to take effect on Monday and to last until Nov. 30. They were approved during a videoconference meeting between Merkel and Germany’s 16 state governors, who are responsible for imposing and lifting restrictions.

Merkel said she and the governors would review the situation after two weeks and possibly “adapt” some measures. But she was adamant that the restrictions, which she acknowledged are tough, can’t be put off.

“It is completely clear that we must act, and now, to avoid an acute national health emergency,” she told reporters in Berlin.

The national disease control center reported on Wednesday morning the latest in a string of daily records for new confirmed cases — 14,964, taking Germany’s total to 449,275. The country of 83 million people also saw 27 more virus-related deaths, raising its death toll in the pandemic to 10,098.

Merkel said the number of COVID-19 patients in intensive care doubled over the past 10 days.

“We can say that our health system can cope with the challenge today,” Merkel said. “But if the pace of infections continues like this, then we’ll reach the limits of what the health system can manage within weeks.”

Under the restrictions approved Wednesday, theaters, operas, concert halls, cinemas, saunas, gyms, swimming pools and some other sports facilities will be shut for four weeks, along with tattoo, massage and beauty parlors. Brothels and some other businesses also will have to close.

Groups of at most 10 people, from a maximum two households, will be allowed in public.

Merkel called on Germans to refrain from making non-essential journeys, including to see relatives, whether inside or outside the country. She said that hotels will be able to host only people on essential travel, not on tourist trips.

But schools, kindergartens, non-essential shops and hairdressers are to remain open, and church services will still be allowed, unlike during Germany’s shutdown in the first phase of the pandemic in March and April. Restaurants will be able to provide take-out food.

The chancellor has repeatedly urged Germans over the past two weeks to reduce their social contacts in a bid to curb the spread of the virus — so far with little success. In recent months, states also have created a patchwork of increasingly varying rules. The hope is that they will take a uniform approach this time, with the aim of allowing life to return to something more like normal in December.

The government plans to spend up to 10 billion euros ($11.8 billion) to compensate companies hit by the shutdown for revenue they miss out on.

Prosperous Germany took less of an economic hit from its spring lockdown, which was milder than those in several other countries, than some of its European peers.

Officials say Germany, which has coped with the outbreak better than many of its neighboring European countries, is beginning to lose control of the situation, with local health authorities unable to trace contacts of those infected and some hospitals refusing to take in new patients.

“We are prescribing a four-week therapy, so to speak,” Bavarian governor Markus Soeder said. “We hope the dose is right and that it will be successful.”

“As with every therapy, (it should) not be broken off too early,” Soeder added. “It must work. We must not make the mistake we have often seen elsewhere of lapsing too early back into another rhythm.”

The plans have caused anguish in Germany’s hospitality industry, with thousands of venue owners staging a protest ahead of Wednesday’s decision at Berlin’s landmark Brandenburg Gate to demand further government financial support.

Merkel noted that there has been a lot of talk about some activities and business areas not generating infections. But she said, “We are now at a point where, on average, we don’t know were 75% of infections across the country come from.”

“One cannot say any more that a certain area doesn’t contribute at all to infections,” Merkel said.

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Follow all of AP’s coronavirus pandemic coverage at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

 

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