Health

Coronavirus: Germany outbreak sparks fresh local lockdown


Authorities hand out food supplies to quarantined employees of the Tönnies meatpacking plantImage copyright
EPA

Image caption

Authorities have sent supplies to the quarantined workers of the Tönnies meatpacking plant

German authorities in North Rhine-Westphalia are bringing back local lockdown measures after a coronavirus outbreak linked to a meatpacking plant.

More than 1,500 employees of the Tönnies plant have tested positive.

State premier Armin Laschet said the “preventative measures” in Gütersloh district, home to about 360,000 people, would last until 30 June.

It is the first such move since Germany began lifting its lockdown restrictions nationwide in May.

The country has been praised for its response to the crisis, but there are fears infections are rising again.

What’s happening in Gütersloh?

Mr Laschet described the outbreak linked to the Tönnies meatpacking plant, south-west of the city of Gütersloh, as the “biggest infection incident” in the country.

“We have decided that further measures are necessary,” he told reporters.

People are not barred from leaving the area, but Mr Laschet appealed for local residents “not to travel to other districts”.

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Getty Images

Image caption

Police were sent to guard residential buildings for the plant’s employees

Bars, museums, cinemas and gyms must all close, and restaurants can only serve meals to take away. Stricter social distancing measures are back in force, meaning people can only meet one person from outside their own household in public. Schools and nurseries for 50,000 children have been closed.

There is also a mandatory quarantine in place for all employees of the affected plant. Three police units have been deployed to enforce the measures, accompanied by aid workers.

Authorities have put up metal fencing around residential buildings where workers live and are distributing food to more than 7,000 employees.

Mr Laschet said it was important that the workers in quarantine are treated humanely. Only 24 residents of the district who do not work at the plant have so far tested positive for the virus, he added.

Bulgarian, Polish and Romanian consular staff have all visited the region and translators are on hand to speak to migrant workers.

Mr Laschet criticised the Tönnies Group on Tuesday for their response, telling reporters their willingness to co-operate “could have been greater”.

All operations at the site were suspended last Wednesday. A spokesman for the Tönnies Group apologised for the outbreak.

Local authorities have the power to enforce different measures in their areas. Regulations differ from region to region.

This is not the only localised outbreak in Germany. A tower block has been placed under quarantine in the central German city of Göttingen, and police were sent to maintain order on Saturday after residents tried to get out.

Officials said those inside attacked officers with fireworks, bottles and metal bars. Most though have been complying with the quarantine.

And other European countries are also seeing small outbreaks. On Monday the north-eastern Spanish region of Aragón reimposed stricter lockdown measures on about 68,000 residents of the Huesca province.

Health minister Salvador Illa said officials were closely monitoring the situation and said it was “on its way to being under control”.

What’s the situation in Germany?

Lothar Wieler, head of the nation’s public health body the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), told reporters on Tuesday the country was at risk of a second wave of infections but said he was optimistic they could prevent it.

Currently the reproduction rate – the R number which indicates how many people one infected person can pass the virus to – in Germany is estimated at 2.76.

But authorities have stressed the outbreaks remain localised.

The R number must be below one for infection rates to fall.

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Media captionWhat is the R number and what does it mean?



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