German COVID-19 deaths pass 100,000 mark in fourth wave


FE Team | Published: November 25, 2021 20:26:40 | Updated: November 29, 2021 17:23:22


A member of the public order office is accompanied by police officers as he checks the coronavirus disease (COVID 19) "2G" protocol in Pirna, Germany, November 24, 2021. REUTERS/Matthias Rietschel

Germany crossed the sombre threshold of 100,000 COVID-19-related deaths on Thursday with a surge in infections posing a challenge for the new government, reports Reuters. 

Another 351 people have died from coronavirus, bringing the total since the start of the pandemic to 100,119, data from the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases showed. The number of new daily cases hit a new record of 75,961.

Hospitals in some areas, especially in eastern and southern Germany, are under pressure and leading virologist Christian Drosten warned that another 100,000 could die in the pandemic.

The head of the Robert Koch Institute has put the mortality rate at about 0.8 per cent, meaning that at daily case numbers around 50,000, some 400 people per day will end up dying.

Germany's incoming three-party government, which announced its coalition deal on Wednesday, said it would create a team of experts who would assess the situation on a daily basis.

Greens co-leader Annalena Baerbock said the new government, comprising the Social Democrats (SPD), Greens and Free Democrats (FDP), had set itself 10 days to decide if further restrictions are needed.

The country should consider partial lockdowns, Ralph Brinkhaus, parliamentary leader of the Christian Democrats, told Deutschlandfunk radio.

"The situation is very, very serious ... and if what we are being told is right - and it was generally right - the situation will get much, much more serious."

Much of Germany has already introduced rules to restrict access to indoor activities to people who have been vaccinated or have recovered.


FDP leader Christian Lindner said tighter regional restrictions would probably be needed if a national lockdown, like that in neighbouring Austria, is to be avoided.

With a vaccine rate of just 68.2 percent, far behind some European countries such as Portugal and Spain, Chancellor-in-waiting Olaf Scholz promised to ramp up vaccinations and did not rule out making it compulsory.

The number of people seeking vaccinations has soared in recent days, with 795,386 getting a shot on Wednesday, although the majority - 626,535 - were boosters.

Scholz has promised to sort out long queues for booster shots in some areas that are slowing things down.

A growing number of politicians are calling for compulsory vaccinations, initially for workers in some sectors, but possibly later for everyone.

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