Anonymous ID: 04cb46 March 24, 2021, 2:04 p.m. No.13290768   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0881

>>13290143

>>13290749

Germany’s Merkel admits ‘mistake’ and reverses Easter lockdown

PUBLISHED WED, MAR 24 20219:48 AM EDTUPDATED WED, MAR 24 202110:12 AM EDT

 

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has reversed plans for a lockdown over Easter amid criticism from experts and officials over the move.

Experts said it would have little impact on a third wave of infections sweeping the country.

Merkel said plans to place the country in a strict lockdown over the Easter holiday — which would have seen all shops and churches close from April 1-5 — were a “mistake.”

 

German Chancellor Angela Merkel reversed plans on Wednesday for a coronavirus lockdown over Easter amid criticism from experts and officials over the move.

 

The plans had called for placing the country in a strict lockdown over the Easter holiday — which would have seen all shops and churches close from April 1-5.

 

“We must try to slow down the third wave of the pandemic. Nevertheless, it was a mistake,” Merkel said during a press conference, according to German news outlet Deutsche Welle. “At the end of the day, I carry the last responsibility.”

 

“It’s now important for me to say so here. A mistake should be called a mistake and above all, it should be corrected, preferably in good time,” she added, according to the news agency.

 

Merkel’s comments come after sharp criticism that a plan, devised earlier this week with regional leaders, to impose a strict lockdown over the Easter period to help halt a third wave of coronavirus cases currently being seen in Germany, largely driven by more infectious variants of the virus.

 

Critics of the move, which included health experts and business leaders, said the lockdown could cause more harm than good, particularly the plans to allow grocery stores and supermarkets to open for a limited amount of time over the holiday — a move likely to cause crowds to gather. Others questioned the lost working hours and wages the move would entail.

 

“It was well reasoned, but was not really doable in such a short time,” Merkel said Wednesday, reflecting on the original lockdown proposal. “Too many questions, from missing wages through to the loss of time in factories and facilities, could not be adequately answered in time.”

 

It’s a rare U-turn from a leader considered Europe’s figurehead and seen as a steady hand during times of crisis. It’s also a further signal that Germany, a country lauded for its initial response to the pandemic, is starting to feel the strain of difficult decisions having to be made as the pandemic continues to throw up new challenges and concerns.

 

When the pandemic emerged in Europe in early 2020, Germany showed it was able to quickly test, trace and isolate early cases of the virus, helping to stop its spread. Its modern health-care network also helped prevent as many deaths as were seen in its continental neighbors.

 

Germany has recorded almost 2.7 million cases and over 75,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. This compares with the U.K.’s 4.3 million cases and over 126,000 deaths.

 

The country had started to ease lockdown measures recently, allowing schools to reopen in February and some nonessential shops to admit customers again earlier this month. Like other European nations, it was banking on the rollout of coronavirus vaccines to enable it to slowly reopen its economy, the largest in Europe.

 

Vaccination rollouts have not gone to plan in the EU, however, with Germany, a country known for its organizational skills, negatively surprising experts with its sluggish program.

 

Germany is not alone in having to adjust plans around Easter; Italy is to reimpose a national lockdown over the period for the second-year running while Paris and other parts of France are again under a partial lockdown.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/24/germanys-merkel-admits-mistake-and-reverses-easter-lockdown.html

Anonymous ID: 04cb46 March 24, 2021, 2:06 p.m. No.13290782   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0881

>>13290143

>>13290749

Satellite imagery shows mega container ship blocking Egypt’s Suez Canal

PUBLISHED WED, MAR 24 202111:17 AM EDTUPDATED WED, MAR 24 20212:49 PM EDT

 

Satellite imagery gives another perspective on the developing situation in Egypt’s Suez Canal, where a mega cargo container ship was turned sideways and stuck.

Imagery captured on Tuesday by a Planet Labs’ Dove satellite showed the stranded ship, called the Ever Given, in the canal.

Suez port agent GAC told Reuters that as of Wednesday morning, Ever Given had been partially refloated and moved against the bank of the canal.

 

Satellite imagery gives another perspective on the developing situation in Egypt’s Suez Canal, where a mega cargo container ship was turned sideways and became stuck, blocking the busy passageway.

 

Imagery captured on Tuesday by a Planet Labs’ Dove satellite showed the stranded ship, called the Ever Given, in the canal.

The Ever Given is about 1,300 feet long (or nearly a quarter mile) and 193 feet wide. The ship weighs about 220,000 tons and is capable of carrying as many as 20,000 containers.

 

A synthetic aperture radar image captured by Capella Space on Wednesday gave another look at the Ever Given, showing how it was wedged into the wall of the canal. Capella CEO Payam Banazadeh noted that the ship’s blurriness in the image “is due to its movement on the water.”

 

“We took this image over 20+ seconds so you are seeing the ship movement during those 20 seconds,” Banazadeh wrote in an email to CNBC.

 

Suez port agent GAC told Reuters that as of Wednesday morning, Ever Given had been partially refloated and moved against the bank of the canal.

 

“The vessel remains aground as of this moment of time, but efforts to re-float her continue in close cooperation with the Suez Canal Authority,” a Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement spokesperson told CNBC around 11:45 a.m. ET. The firm is the technical manager of Ever Given.

 

The ship’s Taiwan-based operator Evergreen Marine Corp. said in a statement that the Ever Given ran aground after being overcome by strong wind as it entered the Suez Canal from the Red Sea. The operator noted that none of its containers had sunk.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/24/satellite-imagery-of-ship-ever-given-blocking-egypts-suez-canal.html