Bavarian Prime Minister enters – “lex budapest super cup final” may come



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The Bavarian prime minister will propose a lex Budapest super cup final at the Bavarian government meeting on Tuesday, which means he will recommend that fans returning from Budapest, who have been classified as high-risk places, be quarantined.

Bavarian Prime Minister Markus Söder is concerned that between 2 and 3 thousand people may fly to Budapest from Munich and Bavaria for the final of the European Super Cup. According to the politician, Hungary was correctly classified as a high-risk country, he writes 444.hu referring to the Stuttgarter Zeitung.

“We have a lot of new infections in the beginning and we have to be very, very careful not to further increase the risk with a soccer Ischgl,” Bavarian Prime Minister Markus Söder said on Monday.

The German politician drew a parallel with the Austrian ski village, which hosted a soccer supercup final on Thursday in front of 20,000 spectators, from where irresponsible skiers and caterers spread the virus in various parts of Germany and Europe when the epidemic spread for the first time.

On Tuesday, Söder will propose at a Bavarian government meeting that sporting and cultural events for those traveling abroad should not be subject to the current exemptions. Now the rule in Bavaria is that anyone who travels to a risky country for less than 48 hours on a business trip or such event does not have to go to 2 weeks of karate at home afterwards, unlike normal tourists.

Söder would withdraw this discount tomorrow with the “lex budapest supercup final”. If the Prime Minister’s proposal is really accepted on Tuesday, those returning from the party in Budapest will have to go into quarantine or present new negative evidence to shorten it.

Drukkers can only enter Hungary with a new negative test. Bayern have been doing it for free so far for their fans at the team stadium, who can do it for free even after they return home. “We are not interested in infected people coming home from Budapest and going unnoticed,” said Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Bayern CEO.

444.hu recalls that Hans Flick, the Bayern coach, does not understand how they can organize a match in front of the spectators in Budapest.



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