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Germany faces 10 ‘tough’ weeks if it gets UK-strain of coronavirus, Merkel warns

Daily newspaper says lockdown could last until April

Samuel Osborne
Tuesday 12 January 2021 12:41 GMT
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‘Merkel said the coming eight to ten weeks would be very hard if the British variant spreads to Germany,’ source says
‘Merkel said the coming eight to ten weeks would be very hard if the British variant spreads to Germany,’ source says (AP/Michael Sohn)

Angela Merkel has reportedly told members of her conservative party that up to 10 weeks of tough measures could be needed in Germany to control the spread of the highly-transmissible UK variant of the coronavirus.

“If we don't manage to stop this British virus, then we will have 10 times the number of cases by Easter,” German daily newspaper Bild  quoted the German chancellor as saying, citing participants in the meeting. “We need eight to 10 more weeks of tough measures.”

Although the paper said Ms Merkel had said she expected Germany’s lockdown to last until the start of April, three participants told Reuters she had not explicitly spoken of an extension of the lockdown until April. They also said she had not warned of a tenfold increase in infection numbers in Germany.

"Merkel said the coming eight to ten weeks would be very hard if the British variant spreads to Germany," one said, adding the chancellor had referred to a tenfold surge in infection numbers in Ireland due to the new variant.

Europe's largest economy aims to be able to limit the spread of the virus until enough of its population has been vaccinated to achieve herd immunity.

Last week Germany tightened its national lockdown and extended it until the end of January over fears the more transmissible variant of the virus discovered in Britain could heap additional strain on struggling hospitals.

It comes as the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases reported 12,802 new Covid-19 cases on Tuesday, with the death toll rising by 891 to 41,577.

Meanwhile, the premier of the southern state of Bavaria, Markus Soeder, called for a discussion on introducing obligatory vaccinations for nursing home staff as many of those working in homes did not plan to get jabs against Covid-19.

Additional reporting by Reuters

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