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Corona vaccination requirement: FDP leader warns shortly before the summit - OB is already sounding the alarm

2022-01-24T09:27:31.462Z


Corona vaccination requirement: FDP leader warns shortly before the summit - OB is already sounding the alarm Created: 01/24/2022, 10:19 am By: Florian Naumann, Astrid Theil Christine Aschenberg-Dugnus and Christian Lindner in the Bundestag. © Frederic Kern/www.imago-images.de In a few days, the Bundestag will be debating the introduction of a general obligation to vaccinate. Now the exact pla


Corona vaccination requirement: FDP leader warns shortly before the summit - OB is already sounding the alarm

Created: 01/24/2022, 10:19 am

By: Florian Naumann, Astrid Theil

Christine Aschenberg-Dugnus and Christian Lindner in the Bundestag.

© Frederic Kern/www.imago-images.de

In a few days, the Bundestag will be debating the introduction of a general obligation to vaccinate.

Now the exact plans of the supporters have become known.

  • The political corona debates are picking up speed again: on Monday (January 25) there is another corona summit.

  • Formally, compulsory vaccination will probably not be an issue.

    But the question remains a major point of contention.

  • Before the start of the summit, the opponents of duty also spoke up (

    update from 9.55 a.m.

    ).

Update from January 24, 9:55 a.m .:

The opponents of compulsory vaccination also speak up in time for the new Corona summit this Monday: "In my opinion there is no argument against vaccination, but there are good arguments against general compulsory vaccination," said FDP health expert Christine Aschenberg-Dugnus of the dpa. High vaccination quotas for booster and first vaccinations as well as target group-oriented communication are the right instruments. "Good vaccination education is more effective than general vaccination."

Meanwhile, many MPs still seem undecided - for Bavaria's Bundestag representatives *, this shows a survey by the radio station Antenne Bayern.

According to this, 29 percent were in favor of general corona vaccination from the age of 18, 18 percent are against it.

The majority - 39 percent - has not yet formed a final opinion and first wants to wait for the debates in parliament.

14 percent did not respond to the radio station's request or said they did not want to comment.

At the CSU, two-thirds of the deputies were still undecided, while almost three-quarters of the SPD representatives were in favor of an obligation.

Vaccination obligation in Germany: city representatives warn of bureaucratic emergency - even with job-related obligation

Meanwhile, at least warning words came from representatives of the cities in Germany. “The federal government must quickly clarify all open questions. It is unacceptable that insane administrative work falls on our feet again in the cities," said Essen's Mayor Thomas Kufen (CDU) of the

WAZ

.

Kufen initially referred to the already decided job-related vaccination requirement, which should come into force in March.

According to Kufen, it is completely unclear how the federal government imagines the interaction between employers and health authorities when handling personal data and how employment bans are to be enforced.

In the city of Essen alone, it is assumed that with a total of 50,000 employees in the affected areas, there could be 2,500 to 3,000 unvaccinated people, the report said.

Corona vaccination obligation: New plans of the supporters are now known

First report from January 24th:

Berlin – Next Wednesday (January 26th) a general compulsory corona vaccination will be debated in the Bundestag for the first time. Now details of the plans of the supporters have been published. The deputy SPD parliamentary group leader Dirk Wiese, who, together with other members of the traffic light coalition, is preparing the key points for compulsory vaccination from the age of 18, gave

details to the

German Press Agency .

According to the plans, the obligation should be limited to one to two years, apply to no more than three vaccinations and be implemented through fines.

A vaccination register should not be created due to the large amount of time required.

Exceptions to the vaccination requirement should also be checked by the public health officer.

On Friday, Wiese, together with six politicians from the Greens and FDP, announced a group application for compulsory vaccination from the age of 18 in a letter to all members of the Bundestag with the exception of the AfD.

In all probability, Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) will also support this application.

The plans of the coalition MPs contain the following points in detail:

Compulsory vaccination: An overview of the plans of the coalition MPs

  • In the group application of the coalition MPs, an obligation for three vaccinations is provided.

    The reason: "On the basis of the current studies, one can say that with three vaccinations one has achieved a good basic immunization against a severe course," says Wiese.

    Additional booster vaccinations should be voluntary.

  • The vaccination requirement will not apply forever, but only for two years.

    Because from a certain point in time there will be such a high level of basic immunity that vaccination is no longer necessary.

    According to experts, this will not be the case after just a few months, but rather after one to two years.

  • Vaccination refusers should be sanctioned with fines. The application is thus opposed to coercive measures such as compulsory detention. According to the law on administrative offenses, fines range from five to 1,000 euros “unless the law stipulates otherwise”. An amount in the "mid three-digit range" is currently being advocated. In the case of non-payment, one could consider an individual penalty payment, according to Wiese. "So you could also take personal living conditions into account when determining the amount." The upper limit for a penalty payment is 25,000 euros according to the Administrative Enforcement Act.

  • A vaccination requirement could be implemented, among other things, by recording vaccinations in a central register.

    However, creating this would take a long time and is sometimes in conflict with data protection.

    Since, according to Wiese, the obligation to vaccinate is primarily there to “get through next autumn and winter”, setting up a vaccination register is not practicable because it would take too long.

    The obligation to vaccinate could be carried out by information technology via the health insurance companies or municipalities.

  • Those for whom there are health reasons against vaccination are exempted from the obligation.

    However, this should not be confirmed by a family doctor, but only by a medical officer.

    The background to this is that there are also doctors who oppose vaccination and fear that they could unjustifiably issue exemption certificates.

  • The decision on the introduction of a general obligation to vaccinate should be made in the Bundestag at the end of March.

    Before the law comes into force, it still has to be passed by the Bundesrat.

    There should then be a kind of grace period during which the unvaccinated can be immunized in order to avoid sanctions.

    In plain language: If the Bundestag agrees at the end of March, the vaccination requirement will come into force between June and August.

Other plans: No compulsory vaccinations or compulsory vaccinations after the age of 50

However, these plans are not without competition.

The FDP politician Andrew Ullmann is currently preparing an application for compulsory vaccination from the age of 50.

The Bundestag Vice President Wolfgang Kubicki (FDP), in turn, has already submitted one against compulsory vaccination *.

Kubicki fears that chaos will result from the implementation of compulsory vaccination.

Current surveys show that public approval for general corona vaccination* in Germany has fallen slightly.

However, there is still a clear majority in favor of this.

According to a survey by the opinion research institute YouGov on behalf of the German Press Agency, 60 percent are in favor of general vaccination, 32 percent are against it, and 8 percent do not provide any information.

At the beginning of December, 63 percent were still in favor and only 30 percent against.

The majority of the population is in favor of compulsory vaccination: especially the age group over 55

A few days after the first vaccination in Germany on December 26, 2020, in a YouGov survey, 56 percent were still against compulsory vaccination and only 33 percent were in favor.

According to the current survey, approval of compulsory vaccination increases with age.

Of the 18 to 24 year olds, only 48 percent are in favor and 35 percent are against.

In the over-55 age group, 68 percent are in favor and only 26 percent are against.

(at/dpa) *Merkur.de is an offer from IPPEN.MEDIA.

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-01-24

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