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France 24
France 24
Politics

Austria bans those unvaccinated against Covid-19 from cafés amid surge in new cases

Austrian Health Minister Wolfgang Mueckstein attends a news conference in Vienna, Austria, on November 5, 2021. © Leonhard Foeger, Reuters

Austria said on Friday it is barring those not fully vaccinated against Covid-19 from cafes, restaurants and hairdressers as infections approach the record set a year ago and the government struggles to convince holdouts to get the shot.

Roughly 64 percent of Austria’s population is fully vaccinated against Covid-19, in line with the European Union average but one of the lowest rates in western Europe. Many Austrians are sceptical about vaccines, as is the far-right Freedom Party, the third-biggest party in parliament.

New daily infections have been surging and on Friday rose to 9,388, close to the record of 9,586 set a year ago, when the second of three national lockdowns was introduced.

“The evolution is exceptional and the occupancies of intensive-care beds are increasing significantly faster than we had expected,” Chancellor Alexander Schallenberg told a news conference on the new measures that take effect on Monday.

These include barring the unvaccinated from hotels and events of more than 25 people.

There will be a four-week transition period in which a first vaccination plus a PCR test will grant admission to places where the unvaccinated will be banned. After that, only the fully vaccinated and those who have recently recovered from a coronavirus infection will be let in.

Friday’s announcement by the conservative-led government comes a day after a similar move by the Social Democrat-led City of Vienna, which has the lowest infection rate among Austria’s nine provinces but the highest percentage of intensive-care beds occupied by Covid-19 patients at 20 percent.

The New York Times reported Friday that the city of Vienna will help vaccinate children as young as five against Covid-19 without official EU approval in what the newspaper said appeared to be the EU’s first systematic inoculation program for children organised by a government body. While US regulators have approved Pfizer’s vaccine for five-to-11-year-olds, kickstarting inoculations for that age group in the United States this week, the European Medicines Agency decision on the matter is still pending.

(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS)

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