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Americans urged not to travel to Germany, Denmark over Covid

People queue at a vaccination tent in the city close to the Christmas market in Hagen, western Germany on November 22. (Photo credit: AFP)

WASHINGTON: The State Department urged Americans Monday not to travel to Germany and Denmark due to surging Covid-19 cases in Europe.

The department issued Level 4 travel advisories – the highest level – for both countries, “indicating a very high level of COVID-19 in the country.”

Potential travelers were also warned that “there are restrictions in place affecting US citizen entry into Denmark.”

Europe’s return to the pandemic’s epicenter has been blamed on a sluggish vaccine uptake in some nations, the highly contagious Delta variant, and colder weather moving people indoors again.

In Germany, the EU’s most populous nation, just 68 per cent of the population is fully jabbed.

A 'Covid-Check' inspector (R) checks digital vaccination certificates on smartphones of Christmas market visitors nearby the Cathedral in Cologne, Germany, 22 November 2021. Germany is dealing with a high number of new coronavirus COVID-19 infections. - EPA pic
A ‘Covid-Check’ inspector (R) checks digital vaccination certificates on smartphones of Christmas market visitors nearby the Cathedral in Cologne, Germany, 22 November 2021. Germany is dealing with a high number of new coronavirus COVID-19 infections. – EPA pic

The country has urged all vaccinated adults to get a booster jab to combat waning vaccine efficacy after six months.

“Probably by the end of this winter, as is sometimes cynically said, pretty much everyone in Germany will be vaccinated, cured or dead,” German Health Minister Jens Spahn said, as he urged more citizens to get the jab.

Outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that Germany’s current Covid curbs – including barring the unvaccinated from certain public spaces – “are not enough.”

With intensive care beds swiftly filling up, Germany’s worst-hit regions have ordered new shutdowns, including the closure of Christmas markets. – AFP







Source: New Straits Times

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