Angela Merkel held talks with regional leaders on extening Germany's lockdown on Tuesday
Credit: MICHELE TANTUSSI/REUTERS
Angela Merkel has been accused of cherrypicking expert coronavirus advisers who agree with her in order to push through her demands for a tougher lockdown.
Germany is set to agree new lockdown measures on Tuesday, and Mrs Merkel is pushing for tighter restrictions despite falling infection numbers. She is said to be concerned new mutations of the virus detected in Britain and South Africa could cause a new surge of infections in Germany.
But sources close to her coalition partners, the Social Democrats (SDP), on Tuesday accused of her deliberately stacking a panel of experts with advisers who agreed with her. Regional leaders met with the panel on Monday ahead of Tuesday’s talks with Mrs Merkel on lockdown measures, but several were said to be unhappy at the exclusion of dissenting scientific voices.
There was particular disquiet after Mrs Merkel reportedly blocked a move by regional leaders to invite Klaus Stöhr, a German virologist who has served as head of the World Health Organisation (WHO)’s Global Influenza Programme and its Sars research coordinator.
A Berlin shopper wears a facemask in the snow
Credit: HAYOUNG JEON/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Dr Stöhr has been an outspoken critic of Germany’s lockdown policy and called for the government to shift to targetted action to protect the elderly and most vulnerable.
“We have to move from wishes to reality,” Dr Stöhr told German television recently. “It is not enough to say you want zero corona. You have to get there somehow.”
He argues hard lockdowns have failed in the UK, France and Austria, and that the current German target of reducing the weekly infection rate to under 50 per 100,000 people is unrealistic in the winter months.
The government panel, which was dominated by rival scientists who have called for harder lockdown and a “zero Covid” policy.
Mrs Merkel came under fire from the German press over the panel’s make-up — and not only from papers that have long been critical of the lockdown like the mass-selling Bild. Writing in the usually more supportive Spiegel magazine, the commentator Lydia Rosenfelder described the panel as “alarmism to order”.
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