A Bulgarian professor told about the complete parody of the measures against COVID-19 in Bavaria



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What are the measures against the spread of the coronavirus in Bulgaria and are they comparable to those in the world? More and more Bulgarians are asking this question, many of them criticize on social media, citing different countries in Europe as an example.

A Bulgarian woman living and working in Bavaria broke the “Western example”.

Maya Dalgacheva works in a kindergarten and describes the total chaos of the local system, which does not protect anyone, nor does it lead to limited cases.

Here is his story, which is shared on social media:

I am currently working in a kindergarten. In Bavaria, a “traffic light” with green, yellow and red codes is used for the epidemic.

At the beginning, in the spring, when we had a red code with many numbers for infected people, the groups switched to Notbetreuung, that is, they could only visit children of parents who could not leave their jobs at that time, mostly doctors.

It was recommended that children do not visit their grandparents so as not to infect them as asymptomatic carriers. We had three children. Distance and disinfection measurements were followed because it was possible to observe them.

After gradual opening, which followed closure, we were ordered to return the children with a runny nose and cough immediately and bring them back with only a negative test.

How are you now?

In September an order arrived, which is still in effect: anyway, children with colds and coughs must be admitted. If symptoms get worse and a fever develops, leave them at home for a day or two and then take them again, without a test!

With the code red, no one switched to the emergency option: the whole group was there, the bosses were silent without explanation. We spent about three weeks wondering why the order was not followed.

Then all of a sudden came an order for a second “partial” lock. (That is: they closed theaters, restaurants, concert halls, all those who complied with the regulations with draconian measures: disinfection, distance, collection of addresses and phone numbers for tracking, but they left the schools.

And the beauty salons, which leads me to think that the confinement is scheduled to last more than a few weeks)

There is currently a crimson code in Bavaria and no, we have no order to restrict visits, although the code is scarier and the figures being exported are much higher than the first time. The reason was that the “yellow code” only applied to kindergartens and schools.

Children do not wear masks. We are evasively advised “if we want to, but still taking into account the fact that we can scare children” to wear masks in the group to “protect ourselves”.

Yes, the same masks that do not protect you, but the other against you, from 20 to 30%, if you change them every hour. Of course, nobody uses; you can’t wander like a robocop and torture through a mask while exercising, hugging, wiping tears.

The work schedule is eight hours, eight hours in a room with twenty children. (The weather outside is already cold, kids go out for a maximum of 45 minutes, stand inside in jackets, and wake up when it’s ventilated.)

The patio is divided into a play area for each group, with ropes tied from the door to a tree in front.

We have to “catch” the runners and explain to a child that he cannot run under the rope to hug his brother / friend from the other group, for example.
There is an order to limit the singing. We do not sing.

However, how do you limit yelling, picking your nose and touching toys afterward, how do you limit laughter, fighting, and nose-to-nose whispering? Even if we imagine that teachers accept the horrible role of police officers, no one is able to control twenty children per minute who are doing any of the above at any given time.

Last Wednesday, a mother called to say she was sick. His son was taken away immediately. To quarantine the group, you cannot do without a test. We are waiting for a test of the child. There will be none: the family is in quarantine and no one can go out to look for him. The health service was informed immediately, but kept silent.

Apparently he didn’t send a person to test the site, because by now it would be ready. A week has passed, the next we will not know what we are in, if we have an infection or not. We work.

They praise us for how well we are doing. Colleagues leave. We do it even better: we take on three times more work. They praise us again.

I spoke with my colleagues from the school where I worked before, some of them are already in other schools. And there is a parody: someone has a cold, they test it and while driving almost asymptomatically at home, the whole class, in some places and the whole class, is in quarantine. And so on indefinitely: the first returned, the second after three days.

There is no online training (in the sense of what Bulgarian teachers have done: preparing and teaching lessons in real time, keeping direct contact with their students), in reality there is no real training. There is an imitation of activity and an imitation of caring, both for education and for people.

One of the district leaders came last week. When I asked why the schools were left in code yellow after all of Bavaria was dark red, the answer was “Such are the old regulations.”

Prime Minister Zoeder explained the above regulations at the briefing with concern for the economy and especially “to prevent domestic violence.” Human: save children’s lives from parental aggression.

Questions all colleagues are currently asking:

1. Why do elementary school kids have to wear masks and keep their distance and kindergarten kids don’t? Do we understand that a child under the age of six and a half is not contagious, but suddenly becomes contagious after a few months, when he turns seven? No, I am not asking for children’s masks, I am asking for arguments.

2. Why should we spend ten hours a day (two hours in a crowded subway round trip, plus eight hours in a group) indoors with crowds that cannot be avoided and with measures that obviously do not apply? for us, but we can not enter a coffee sterilized with disinfectants on weekends, at three tables of other visitors?

3. Why, although in Bavaria the measures of masks and distance in public places have not been abandoned from the beginning, and the people as a whole are disciplined and have confidence in the government, are we currently in this situation?

There are sharper questions, but they are asked during protests.

By the way, we learned that the district chief told our director privately that there were already cases of infected colleagues. But he asked her not to tell us, “so as not to cause panic.” Nice, right?

And recently I saw in German comments that they also call their country Absurdistan; not in translation, they use exactly the same word.



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