Austria’s fourth lockdown to end for vaccinated people on Sunday

8 December 2021, 14:04

Austria Politics
Austria Politics. Picture: PA

The country has a relatively low vaccination rate for Western Europe, with just 67.7% of the population fully vaccinated.

Austria’s fourth national lockdown of the pandemic will end on Sunday but restrictions will remain for unvaccinated people, the country’s chancellor has said.

Karl Nehammer said the end of the lockdown will be an “opening with a seatbelt”, meaning some measures — such as an obligation to wear masks on public transport and inside stores and public spaces — will also stay in place for people who are vaccinated or have recovered from Covid-19.

There will also be an 11pm curfew for restaurants and limits on the number of people attending cultural events.

Stricter measures can be implemented independently by regions that are especially affected by the pandemic, Mr Nehammer said.

He stressed that unvaccinated people could end their lockdowns immediately by getting the jab, but also acknowledged that “it still takes a lot of convincing” some citizens.

“The lockdown for the unvaccinated continues. I also understand that the people who are affected by it feel aggrieved,” Mr Nehammer told reporters in Vienna.

“At the same time, there is the offer of science, that by getting vaccinated these troubles can be quickly put aside and that then common freedom can actually be lived together.”

Austria has a relatively low vaccination rate for Western Europe, with just 67.7% of the population fully vaccinated.

Tens of thousands have protested across the Alpine nation in recent weeks against the lockdown and the upcoming vaccine mandate.

Virus Outbreak Austria
A person walks along the Danube Canal during the lockdown in Vienna, with anti-vaccination graffiti in the background (Lisa Leutner/AP)

The government announced last month that it would implement a vaccine mandate early next year and said on Wednesday that details about the compulsory vaccinations will be presented later this week.

Under the lockdown, which started on November 22, people were allowed to leave their homes only for specific reasons, including buying groceries, going to the doctor or exercising.

Day care centres and schools remained open for those who needed them, but parents were asked to keep children at home if possible.

The country’s seven-day infection rate declined by about half during the lockdown. It stood at 535.6 cases per 100,000 residents on Tuesday, down from more than 1,100 on the day the lockdown started.

Mr Nehammer was sworn in on Monday as Austria’s third chancellor in two months, capping a round of upheaval triggered by the decision last week of Sebastian Kurz, the country’s dominant political figure of recent years, to bow out of politics.

Mr Nehammer, 49, has been Austria’s interior minister since early 2020. He is taking over as leader of the conservative Austrian People’s Party, which Mr Kurz led to election victories in 2017 and 2019.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

APTOPIX Trump Hush Money

Jury selection enters pivotal stretch as Trump’s hush money trial resumes

California Google News

Google fires 28 staff after office sit-ins to protest cloud contract with Israel

A police forensic officer at the Christ the Good Shepherd church in suburban Wakely in western Sydney, Australia

Sydney bishop says he ‘forgives’ alleged attacker after church stabbing

French construction worker Damien Guerot

French hero gains Australian residency for confronting shopping centre killer

Firefighters work on a building that was partially destroyed after a Russian bombardment in Chernihiv, Ukraine (Francisco Seco/AP)

Russia reports downing five Ukrainian military balloons

Fire and smoke rise out of the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, in Copenhagen, Denmark

Copenhagen and Paris mayors discuss lessons learned after fires wreck landmarks

Police officers clean the debris from an earthquake in Uwajima, Ehime prefecture, western Japan

Strong earthquake in Japan leaves nine with minor injuries, but no tsunami

Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump meets with Poland’s President Andrzej Duda

Poland’s president becomes latest foreign leader to visit Donald Trump

German far-right politician of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) Bjorn Hocke, centre, attends his trial in the state court in Halle, Germany

Far-right politician stands trial in Germany over alleged use of Nazi slogan

Belgium EU Summit

EU leaders vow to impose tougher sanctions on Iran as Ukraine pleads for support

Asylum seeker Anicet Mayela pictured outside Campsfield House detention centre in Oxfordshire

Asylum seeker raped 15-year-old girl after his deportation flight was blocked by protesting cabin crew

Skye, a Husky dog, sits near floodwater in Dubai

UAE struggles to recover after heaviest recorded rainfall hits desert nation

A man walks past the entrance to the Westfield shopping centre at Bondi Junction in Sydney

Sydney shopping centre reopens after stabbings

Sydney church stabbing: Australian bishop forgives alleged attacker

Australian bishop breaks silence as he 'forgives' alleged attacker following brutal stabbing

Croatia Election

Croatia’s ruling conservatives win parliamentary vote but cannot rule alone

Indonesia Volcano Eruptions

Thousands evacuated and tsunami alert issued after Indonesian volcano eruption