Germany’s lockdown extended to April 18, tightened for Easter

By Ulrich Steinkohl, Joerg Blank and Andreas Hoenig, dpa

German leaders early on Tuesday agreed to extend the country’s coronavirus lockdown until April 18 to contain a new wave of infections and to tighten up measures for a five-day period over the Easter holidays.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and leaders of the country’s federal states reached agreement on the strict lockdown measures early Tuesday following 11 hours of talks on the country’s way forward in the pandemic.

Leaders agreed that public and private life are to come to a virtual standstill over the long Easter holiday weekend from April 1 through 5. Shops are to remain closed throughout, except for grocery stores and supermarkets which will be allowed to be open on Saturday April 3.

People are urged to stay home throughout those five days, leaders said in a statement.

Public gatherings are generally banned during that time, but Covid-19 testing and vaccination centres will remain open.

Easter services are largely to be held virtually, and private gatherings limited to five people from two households, not counting children up to the age of 14.

Merkel justified the new measures in view of the rapidly increasing number of infections.

“We have not yet been able to defeat the virus, it does not give up,” she said early Tuesday morning in Berlin after the talks.

Merkel said the situation in Germany was quite serious, with the number of cases rising exponentially, increasing stress on hospital intensive care units and the spread of more contagious coronavirus variants of the coronavirus.

She spoke of the vaccination situation in Germany as “a race.”

It was also agreed that once a seven-day incidence of more than 100 new infections per 100,000 inhabitants is registered, local government districts must further tighten lockdown measures.

This would include some curfews, stricter contact restrictions or the obligation for people to get daily quick Covid-19 tests in areas where social distancing or consistent mask-wearing are difficult to keep up.

The talks were bogged down at one point because of major differences over the concept of socially distanced holidays, with several states wanting to allow people to take solitary holidays in vacation rentals, holiday homes, apartments, caravans and mobile homes. But no agreement was reached.

Most shops in Germany have been closed since December 16. Restaurants, bars and leisure facilities have been closed since early November. The country has moved ahead with the first reopenings this month, with hairdressers, florists and hardware stores permitted to unlock their doors in some areas.

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