German disease control head warns of 'terrible Christmas'
ABC News
The head of Germany’s disease control agency has warned that the country faces a “really terrible Christmas” unless steps are taken to counter the sharp rise in coronavirus infections
BERLIN -- The head of Germany's disease control agency has warned that the country faces a “really terrible Christmas” unless steps are taken to counter the sharp rise in coronavirus infections.
German lawmakers are debating measures Thursday that would replace the nationwide epidemic rules, which will expire at the end of the month.
The Robert Koch Institute, Germany's disease control agency, said Thursday that 65,371 newly confirmed cases had been reported in a single day, continuing the upward trend that experts have been warning about for weeks.
“We are currently heading toward a serious emergency,” the agency's director, Lothar Wieler, said. “We are going to have a really terrible Christmas if we don't take countermeasures now.”