Puppet Masters
Germany last month passed a law giving Chancellor Angela Merkel's government more powers to fight a third wave of the coronavirus, including curfews between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. in regions with high infection rates.
The constitutional court said in its ruling the rejection of the emergency appeals did not mean that the curfew was in line with Germany's Basic Law, adding that the judges would take a closer look at the issue during the main hearing.
Merkel drew up the stricter rules after some of Germany's 16 federal states refused to impose tough measures despite a surge in cases.
The court ruling came as data suggested that the stricter measures seemed to have helped to break the third wave of cases and push down infections.
Confirmed new coronavirus cases in Germany rose on Wednesday by 18,034 to 3,451,550, but that 24-hour figure was 4,000 lower than a week ago, and the seven-day incidence per 100,000 people dropped to 132 from 141 on Tuesday, the lowest in three weeks.
Legislation passed last month enabled the federal government to impose night-time curfews in areas where cases exceed 100 per 100,000 residents on three consecutive days, and even stricter curbs where cases go above 165 per 100,000.
Three of Germany's states are now under the key threshold of 100 cases per 100,000 - Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein - while three others are getting close - Berlin, Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
The southern state of Bavaria said on Tuesday it would allow outdoor dining to resume from May 10 in areas where the incidence is under 100, and allow the tourism sector to reopen from May 21, when that part of the country has school holidays.
The state of Lower Saxony has also agreed to ease the rules for restaurants, tourism and retail for areas under 100.
Health Minister Jens Spahn called on the states to give priority to opening outdoor activities so as not to risk a new wave of infections.
On Tuesday, Germany's cabinet agreed to ease restrictions on people who are fully vaccinated or have recovered from COVID-19, a decree which could come into effect at the weekend.
After a sluggish start, the pace of vaccinations has been picking up in Germany and the number of people with coronavirus needing intensive care treatment in hospital has begun to fall.
Comment: According to a poll, most Germans are against relaxing lockdown measures only for vaccinated people, but not because the idea of vaccine passports repulse them. 66% think the lockdown measures are appropriate or not strong enough:
Four in ten Germans believe that letting vaccinated people outside during a night-time curfew and allowing them to meet others without limitations at a time when the rest of the population is bound to follow strict rules is "fundamentally wrong," according to a recent poll commissioned by the German ARD broadcaster.Meanwhile in Saudi Arabia: mandatory vaccination for all workers.
Another 28% of respondents believe that such measures should be reserved for a time when more people have the opportunity to take a shot.
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Only about 26% of Germans consider the measures proposed by the government earlier in May "correct." They also agree that the rule relaxation for those vaccinated should be introduced "immediately."
The survey also found that 40% of Germans believe that current lockdown measures aimed at containing the spread of the virus are "appropriate" — up 16 percent from April, ARD notes. A third of them believe the measures go "too far," while 26% believe they are "not enough."





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