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						day after mea culpa, Merkel gives Germans virus pep talk
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		[March 25, 2021]  
		By Paul Carrel and Thomas Escritt
 BERLIN (Reuters) - The light is at the end 
		of the tunnel and "we will defeat this virus", Chancellor Angela Merkel 
		told Germans on Thursday, just a day after she asked the country to 
		forgive her U-turn on a circuit-breaker lockdown over Easter.
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			 Merkel's decision on Wednesday to drop plans for an extended Easter 
			holiday to try to break a third wave of COVID-19, agreed two days 
			earlier during talks with governors of Germany's 16 states, raised 
			concerns she had lost her grip on the crisis. 
 In a firm, 27-minute address to lawmakers on Thursday, she 
			acknowledged how difficult life is for many people but urged them to 
			think positively, arguing that vaccinations offered a way out of the 
			crisis.
 
 "It will take a few more months, but the light at the end of the 
			tunnel is visible. We will defeat this virus!" she told lawmakers in 
			the Bundestag lower house of parliament.
 
			
			 
			
 "Now it's a matter of gathering strength and moving forward 
			positively, even though the situation is difficult at the moment. 
			That is what I want from everyone in this country," Merkel said to 
			loud applause.
 
 Germany reported another 22,657 infections on Thursday, while the 
			death toll rose by 228 to 75,440. Deaths have fallen from earlier in 
			the year when vaccinations had not begun, but admissions to 
			intensive care units are creeping up and the seven-day case 
			incidence is now 113 compared with 90 a week ago.
 
 Merkel addressed the Bundestag ahead of an EU leaders' summit later 
			on Thursday, at which she said they would discuss how to make sure 
			more vaccines are made on European soil.
 
			
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			 The European Commission has 
								threatened to ban exports to countries like 
								Britain that have higher vaccination rates but 
								do not export shots to the EU. The aim is to 
								safeguard supplies for the bloc's own citizens 
								as they face a third wave of the pandemic.
 "British production sites are manufacturing for 
								Britain and the United States is not exporting, 
								so we are reliant on what we can make in 
								Europe," Merkel said.
 "We have 
			to assume that the virus, with its mutations, may be occupying us 
			for a long time to come so the question goes far beyond this year," 
			she added.
 Britain and the European Commission said on Wednesday they were 
			discussing how they could work together to create a "win-win" 
			situation on COVID-19 vaccines after the bloc threatened to take 
			tougher measures to curb the export of deliveries of shots.
 
 Ahead of the EU summit, Bavarian state premier Markus Soeder backed 
			calls for controls on Europe's vaccine exports.
 
 "There needs to be a ban on exports of European vaccines to 
			countries that produce vaccines themselves and do not supply 
			anything to Europe," he tweeted.
 
 (Reporting by Paul Carrel; Editing by Riham Alkousaa and Catherine 
			Evans)
 
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