Tray on travel warning in Germany: “Heavy blow for …



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This step affects the livelihoods of many Tyroleans, every third of a euro is earned in the state in tourism. Now everything must be done to reduce the number of new infections. There will be no tightening at first.

The Governor of Tyrol, Günther Platter (ÖVP), described Germany’s travel warning as a “severe blow” to Tyrol as a business location. This step affects the livelihoods of many Tyrolese, especially since every third of a euro in the state is earned from tourism. Everything must now be done to reduce the number of new infections so that Tyrol can “kick off the winter season”.

“We must not bury our heads in the sand now,” said the governor. Even in May, one would not have thought that it could dominate the summer season. He called on the population to adhere to measures to reduce the number of infections.

The travel warning will not result in any further action, Platter said. Now we must analyze the effects of moving the curfew to 10 pm in Tyrol and the measures taken by the federal government. Only then can it be decided whether further restrictions are necessary.

No big deal at the conference

On Friday night, the three-hour meeting between the federal government and state representatives yielded no concrete results. In a subsequent press conference, Federal Chancellor Sebastian Kurz (ÖVP) called on Vienna, in particular, to impose more restrictions. Vice Chancellor Werner Kogler (Greens) once again appealed to the federal states to accept offers from the federal government to use the army and the police in contact tracing.

Kurz recalled that Vienna had about twice as many cases relative to Lower Austria, Tyrol and Vorarlberg, which had also faced travel warnings. Obviously, the vice president is not good enough for the federal capital to be required to register in the restaurant sector. He expressed the hope that further “necessary” measures would be taken in Vienna. Interior Minister Karl Nehammer (ÖVP) saw “room for improvement” in the federal capital and stressed that these assessments have nothing to do with the electoral campaign.

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