EU Jabs to be mandatory in Germany from February as toughter restrictions brought in for unvaccinated

Chancellor Angela Merkel says she is "depressed" by the strength of the fourth wave of infections in the country and was hoping a voluntary approach to immunisation would be more effective.

Unvaccinated people in Germany are to be excluded from non-essential stores, cultural and recreational venues, Chancellor Angela Merkel has said.

In addition, parliament will consider making coronavirus jabs mandatory from February.


About 68.7% of the population in Germany is fully vaccinated, far below the 75% minimum ministers are aiming for.

The effort to get jabs into more arms will be boosted by adding dentists and pharmacists to those administering them.

Speaking after a meeting with federal and state leaders, Mrs Merkel said the measures were necessary amid concerns hospitals could be overwhelmed.

Some hospitals in the south and east have transferred patients to other parts of Germany because of a shortage of intensive care beds.

The new Omicron variant is adding to health officials' concerns.

Mrs Merkel said she was "depressed" by the strength of the fourth wave of infections in the country, adding she had been hoping a voluntary approach to immunisation would be more effective.

The situation regarding COVID in Germany is "very serious", she added, describing the new measures as an "act of national solidarity".

"The fourth wave must be broken and this has not yet been achieved," she said.

More than 70,000 new infections have been recorded in a 24-hour period.

Mrs Merkel is likely to have left office by February, and mandatory jabs will need to be debated in the Bundestag, following guidance from Germany's Ethics Council.

She said she would vote in favour were she still a member of parliament.

Finance Minister Olaf Scholz - who is expected to be elected as Mrs Merkel's successor next week - has also backed the idea, as do most Germans, according to opinion polls.

"If we had a higher vaccination rate, we wouldn't be discussing this now," Mr Scholz said.

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I wonder when they are going to go full-Austria and start fining people several thousand dollars for not taking the vaccine. Or go the Australia route and ship people off to concentration camps.

Or I guess the citizens can just pay some gypsy to go to the clinic and take the vaccine for them. It's already been done at least once before.
 
The restrictions are already extreme in Germany (or at least in my state).
For attending public events you either need a vaccination pass or a PCR test which costs like 50 bucks. The cheap quick tests aren't allowed anymore.
This is why I have been staying clear of the country despite wanting to visit relatives there. I don't want cause issues for them but I will not share my health care choices with randos and will not just quietly stay away either, so demands for corona pass would make me to make a scene. Plus there is just so much less to do, traveling just isn't worth it. I'm so glad that people around me are absolutely refusing to use the local corona pass so I don't have issues at home at the moment.
 
Can someone explain to a brainlet like me how each wave is "worse then the last" even though more people are vaccinated then the previous.
They're more contagious. I feel like a broken record saying this, but a lot of these elites got dead set on this notion they could achieve zero-Rona so these variants getting more contagious has to drive them nuts as it keeps making their fantasy conclusion to Rona seem all the more unrealistic.
 
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