Rheda-Wiedenbrueck, western Germany sculptures lockdown
Sculptures stand at a restaurant in the city of Rheda-Wiedenbrueck, western Germany on June 23, 2020. After a coronavirus outbreak at a slaughterhouse in the town of Rheda-Wiedenbrueck that has infected more than 1,500 workers out of a total of nearly 7,000 German authorities ordered a new lockdown for an entire district - the first since easing coronavirus restrictions and a major setback for hopes of a swift return to normality. Image Credit: AFP

Berlin: German authorities slapped new lockdown measures Tuesday on a western region that has seen hundreds of coronavirus infections linked to a slaughterhouse, trying to make sure the cluster doesn’t race into the wider community.

More than 1,550 people have tested positive for coronavirus at the Toennies slaughterhouse in Rheda-Wiedenbrueck and thousands more workers and family members have been put under a quarantine to try to halt the outbreak.

The company has blamed its workforce, which is made up of mostly immigrants from Eastern Europe, for bringing the virus in while union officials say the outbreak is due to the terrible working and living conditions employees faced under loosely regulated sub-contractors.

The governor of North Rhine-Westphalia state, Armin Laschet, said people in Guetersloh and parts of a neighbouring county for the next week will face some of the same restrictions that existed across Germany during the early stages of the pandemic in March.

These include limiting the number of people who can meet in public to those from a single household or two people from separate households, Laschet said.

“We will order a lockdown for the whole of Guetersloh county,” he told reporters Tuesday. “The purpose is to calm the situation, to expand testing to establish whether or not the virus has spread beyond the employees of Toennies.”

“We will get a better picture of the situation through intensive testing, and can then see more clearly within seven days what the situation is,” Laschet said.

Cinemas closed

Cinemas, fitness studios and bars will be closed, but stores will remain open and restaurants can still serve customers from the same household. Previously, the western county had only closed schools and daycare centers, sparking anger from parents who said their children were being punished for failings at the slaughterhouse.

Prior to the Toennies outbreak, Germany had been widely praised for its handling of the pandemic. Intensive testing, tracing and hospital preparation measures kept Germany’s death toll five times smaller than Britain’s. Germany has seen over 8,900 confirmed virus deaths and about 192,000 cases.

Toennies, a family-owned company, has been criticised for using subcontractors for parts of its operation. The practice, which is common in the German meat industry and which the government now wants to ban, often results in migrant workers living in cramped communal housing and being transported to abattoirs in minibuses, heightening the risk of infection.

A video circulating on social media also showed workers at Toennies seated close together during break times, although the company has disputed how recent the video is.

Laschet expressed his frustration Tuesday at the company’s handling of the outbreak, saying authorities had to order Toennies _ Germany’s biggest meat processing company _ to release the names of its employees.

“The readiness to cooperate could have been greater,” he said.

Laschet said the measures will be lifted June 30 if the situation has improved, but declined to provide specific parameters for success. He also urged other regions in Germany not to discriminate against people from Guetersloh.

The German news agency dpa reported that 14 people on vacation, some of them from Guetersloh, were told Monday to leave the Baltic Sea island of Usedom, a popular holiday resort. And Bavaria issued a ban on hotels renting rooms to people from Guetersloh or other countries with more than 50 new cases per 100,000 inhabitants. Exceptions will be made for people who can present a negative coronavirus test.

The head of Germany’s disease control centre said Tuesday the exact reasons why slaughterhouses in Germany, the United States and elsewhere have become coronavirus infection hubs are still being investigated.

“It’s certainly the case that if you live in cramped conditions and small rooms then that’s a situation where the virus can spread more easily,” said Lothar Wieler, chief of the Robert Koch Institute.

But he added that low temperatures in parts of the plant, intended to keep the meat cool, could also play a role.

“Another factor, which we don’t think is small, is the development of aerosols,” said Wieler, referring to tiny droplets that can linger in the air and potentially contain viruses.

Wieler said the outbreak at the slaughterhouse and others linked to religious gatherings could certainly spread to other people in Germany.

“That’s why it’s so important that we remain careful,” he said. “The virus is still in the country and if we give it the chance to spread, then it will take that chance.”

But he expressed hope that Germany could avoid a second wave of the pandemic if people followed government advice on social distancing and hygiene.

Dr. Ute Rexroth, a senior Robert Koch Institute official involved in Germany’s pandemic response, noted that poverty seems to play a significant role in who gets infected, calling it “the root of the problem.”