-
Published: 11 August 2021
In a procedure aimed at driving more people to receive antiretroviral vaccines. However, children and people who cannot be vaccinated for health reasons will be allowed to undergo free screening. The German government and the provinces have decided to suspend free Covid-19 screening with effect from 11 October.
The Kofid-19 screening, evidence of vaccine or recent recovery from the epidemic will have to be highlighted to enter restaurants, cinemas and gymnasiums in areas where the incidence is high. Therefore, those who refused to receive vaccines would have to prove that they were not infected, otherwise they would not be able to enter these places.
This will be imposed in any region with an injury rate of 35 out of every 100,000 inhabitants over a period of more than seven days. The incidence in Germany was 23.5, but several areas, including Berlin and Hamburg, exceeded the 35 threshold.
After more than 1 million doses per day were recorded at the height of the vaccination campaign, the receipt of vaccines in Europe's largest population side declined dramatically.
As of Tuesday, 52 million people in Germany (equivalent to 62.5 percent of the population) had received at least one dose of vaccines, but Merkel hoped that an additional 15 to 20 percent of the population would receive vaccines.
Merkel said, "All friends and family members who have fortified to promote this among their friends, families and sports clubs," "to promote vaccines whenever possible. Everyone's responsibility. " Merkel has repeatedly stated that she does not believe that the imposition of vaccination is right. However, opponents accused her Government of using tests as a tool to pressure the population to receive vaccines.
It should be noted that the leader of the hard-right Alternative for Germany party, Alice Feidel, who did not receive the vaccine, reported that the move involved "indirect compulsory vaccination through restrictions, bans and other additional burdens."
However, Merkel stressed that there could be no restrictions on pollinators because part of the population chose not to be vaccinated.
"We must also think about those who work in hospitals and we must make sure that the health system is not flooded," she said.
Germany's latest move is similar to the recent restrictions imposed by France requiring a "health permit" to enter cinemas, cafes or trains.
The imposition by the government of French President Emmanuel Macron of a health permit that proves either vaccination or no infection through testing or recovery from Covid-1999 sparked angry demonstrations in France. There have also been frequent protests in Germany against the restrictions on containing the epidemic and vaccines.