Over 1,300 Workers Test Positive at Germany Meatpacking Plant

As of Monday morning, 20 workers at the Tonnies meat plant have been hospitalized and several are in intensive care.

Two people stand at a fence separate a quarantined apartment building in Goettingen, Germany on Monday, June 22. The city council has quarantined an entire residential complex to contain the coronavirus in the area.
Two people stand at a fence separate a quarantined apartment building in Goettingen, Germany on Monday, June 22. The city council has quarantined an entire residential complex to contain the coronavirus in the area.
Swen Pfoertner/dpa via AP

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman said “everything needs to be done” to contain an outbreak of the coronavirus linked to a large slaughterhouse where over 1,300 people have tested positive for COVID-19.

Steffen Seibert said 20 workers at the Toennies meat plant in the western Guetersloh region have been hospitalized and several are in intensive care.

“We very much hope that all those who have fallen ill survive,” Seibert told reporters in Berlin on Monday. “This is an outbreak that needs to be taken very seriously.”

Authorities have scrambled to stop the outbreak from spreading, by ordering mass tests of all workers and putting thousands of people into quarantine. The outbreak at Toennies, where many workers are migrants from Eastern Europe, has pushed up Germany’s daily infection rate.

Authorities have dispatched virologists, contact tracing teams and the German army to help contain the outbreak.

Germany’s disease control center says the country has seen 190,359 confirmed cases and 8,885 virus-related deaths — about five times fewer deaths than in Britain. 

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