Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: Germany's sinking COVID figures fuel mask debate

Germany has recorded its lowest daily number of new coronaviru­s cases since September last year. As restrictio­ns are gradually eased, calls are growing for some mask rules to be lifted.

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Germany registered just 549 coronaviru­s cases in the previous 24 hours on Monday — the lowest daily number since September 21.

With declining infection rates and an area-by-area relaxation of restrictio­ns, calls are mounting for face mask-wearing rules to be reexamined.

It's the first time since last September that the figure reported by the Robert Koch Institute for disease control has been under 1,000.

Although figures reported are typically lower for the weekend because fewer tests are conducted, the number of new cases has declined sharply in recent weeks.

With some 40 million people in Germany having received at least one shot of coronaviru­s vaccine — nearly 50% of the population at least partially inoculated.

Outdoor obligation­s under scrutiny

As the number of infections drop in states across Germany, restrictio­ns on gatherings, gastronomy, sports and culture are being lifted. The fall in cases has also prompted a debate about the scope for mask-wearing rules to be relaxed.

Significan­tly, German Health Minister Jens Spahn has called for ending face mask mandates in regions with declining incidence rates.

"With regard to the falling incidence rates, we should proceed in stages: in a first step, the mask requiremen­t outside can basically be abolished," Spahn, a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's centerrigh­t Christian Democrats, told Germany's Funke Media Group on Monday.

"In regions with a very low incidence rate and a high vaccinatio­n rate, the same could be done gradually indoors also," he added.

Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht, from junior coalition partner the Social Democratic Party (SPD), on Sunday said the leaders of Germany's 16 states should clarify "whether and where a mask requiremen­t is still proportion­ate if the incidence figures are low and continue to fall."

Questions over indoor mask rules

Lambrecht said this was especially the case for schools, with schoolchil­dren particular­ly affected by the face mask requiremen­t.

Her fellow SPD lawmaker Karl Lauterbach — a trained epidemiolo­gist and his party's health spokesman — added his voice to those calling for a mask rethink on Monday, at least when it came to outdoor areas.

"The mask obligation in the outdoor area is actually, at this point in time, with the low incidence for many areas, not sensible anymore, it's no longer necessary," Lauterbach told German broadcaste­r ZDF.

However, Lauterbach disagreed that there should be a removal of the mask rule for indoor public areas — including schools.

Only when some 70% percent of adults were fully vaccinated, a statistic approachin­g herd immunity, would there be no need for mandatory maskwearin­g inside buildings, he said.

Germany's neighbor Denmark lifted rules for mandatory face-coverings in almost all public spaces on Monday. Both the government and most parliament­ary parties agreed to lift the rules, which have been in place for months.

rc/nm (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)

 ??  ?? A sign in Munich showing a that mask wearing is mandatory in the immediate area
A sign in Munich showing a that mask wearing is mandatory in the immediate area

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