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| - German Health Minister Jens Spahn on Thursday suggested coronavirus restrictions could be lifted before spring, as case numbers in the country continued to edge downwards. "We can't stay in this hard lockdown all winter. We would not tolerate that well as a society," Spahn said in an interview with the Funke media group. Germany went into a partial lockdown in November, closing bars, restaurants and cultural and sporting facilities. Schools and non-essential shops were added to the list in mid-December, with rules on mask-wearing and working from home tightened in January amid concerns over new virus variants. The numbers of new infections and of patients in intensive care have been falling steadily since the start of the year, a trend Spahn called "encouraging". Chancellor Angela Merkel, giving a rare interview on German TV for the second time this week, struck a slightly more cautious tone. "A quick reopening only to quickly shut down again, as some of our neighbours have unfortunately done, doesn't help us," she told broadcaster RTL. "I see a light at the end of the tunnel, but this is an incredibly difficult time," the veteran leader said. "It's now a matter of weeks that we still have to endure, provided we don't see more aggressive mutations." Merkel and the leaders of Germany's 16 states will meet next Wednesday to decide whether to extend restrictions after they expire on February 14. Germany's Robert Koch Institute health body reported 14,211 new cases and 786 deaths on Thursday and an incidence rate of 81 -- still well above the target of 50 that German politicians have set as a yardstick for reopening. Some experts believe it is too soon to relax the measures. Ute Teichert, the head of the Federal Association of German Public Health Officers, called last week for a so-called zero-Covid strategy to stamp out infections. "We cannot start relaxing (restrictions) again at an incidence rate of 100, 70 or 50," she said. But Spahn said the goal for Germany remained "to prevent the health system from being overburdened -- and not to avoid every infection". "To get it down to zero infections and keep it that way comes at a disproportionate cost in other areas of life," he said. Almost three million older people and medical workers have so far received their first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, with calls growing for new freedoms for those who have had the jabs. But the German Ethics Council, which advises the government on scientific and moral issues, on Thursday came out in opposition to lifting restrictions for those who have been inoculated. Council head Alena Buyx advised against "individual relaxation of the rules", pointing to a lack of evidence on whether those who have received jabs are still able to spread the virus. fec-mfp/spm
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