Germany has introduced new measures to slow a rise in COVID cases after the nation set a new record for coronavirus infections for a second consecutive day. Numbers are growing in many European countries, and those with the lowest vaccination rates are being hit the hardest.
Most Germans will be “vaccinated, cured or dead” from Covid-19 in a few months, Health Minister Jens Spahn warned as he urged more citizens to get jabbed.
“Probably by the end of this winter, as is sometimes cynically said, pretty much everyone in Germany will be vaccinated, cured or dead,” Mr Spahn said, blaming “the very contagious Delta variant”.
“That is why we so urgently recommend vaccination,” he added. The stark warning comes as Germany is racing to contain a record rise in coronavirus infections in recent weeks, with hospitals sounding the alarm about overflowing intensive care units.
Despite widespread access to free coronavirus vaccines, just 68 per cent of the German population is fully vaccinated, a level experts say is too low to keep the pandemic under control.
Senior politicians in Germany have said vaccine mandates are “inevitable,” as the country battles its deadly fourth wave of Covid-19.
Germany, the EU’s most populous country, added another 30,643 cases on Monday, according to the Robert Koch Institute health agency, bringing the total since the start of the pandemic to just over 5.3 million.
Almost 100,000 people have died so far, including 62 over the past 24 hours.
“We have a very, very difficult situation in many hospitals,” Mr Spahn said.
Germany last week announced tougher coronavirus curbs to contain the ferocious fourth Covid wave.
In regions with high hospitalisation rates, the unvaccinated will be barred from public spaces like cinemas, gyms and indoor dining.
Employees are asked to return to working from home whenever possible, while anyone going into the workplace has to prove they are vaccinated, recovered or have recently tested negative – a system known as “3G”.
All vaccinated adults have also been urged to get a booster shot to combat waning vaccine efficacy after six months. / Argumentum.al with AFP and news.com.au