Government flight to Canada: maskless passengers cause criticism

Government flight to Canada
Maskless passengers cause criticism

Pictures from the flight of the German government delegation to Canada caused criticism. Because Minister Habeck and accompanying journalists can be seen without masks in photos and videos. The government rejects the allegations: it is said that there is no mask requirement on Air Force flights.

During the trip to Canada by Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Vice-Chancellor Robert Habeck, footage from on board the government aircraft caused criticism. Habeck and numerous journalists can be seen without masks. According to the federal government, this does not violate the rules for flying with the Bundeswehr Air Force: “There is no mask requirement on Air Force flights. All participants on the trip must present a current negative PCR test before they start. This is a high level of protection guaranteed,” said a government spokesman.

On Sunday, more than 80 passengers, including 25 media representatives, were on board the Air Force Airbus A340 on the flight from Berlin to Montreal, Canada. Photos and an ARD video show Economics Minister Habeck and journalists close together without mouth and nose protection. The prerequisite for traveling with you was a negative PCR test, which was no more than 24 hours old at the time of departure.

Ex-CDU leader Armin Laschet wrote down Twitter, journalists and members of the government flouted “laws (which may be nonsensical, but valid).” In October 2020, when he was Prime Minister of North Rhine-Westphalia at the time, he was criticized for a photo that showed him on a plane without a mask. A spokesman said at the time that Laschet only took off the mask for a brief moment to eat and drink in accordance with AHA rules and the airline’s specifications.

Criticism of “patchwork of rules”

Lufthansa also reported in one Twitter-Thread on word: “A negative PCR test does not exempt you from wearing a mask.” The former Berlin AfD parliamentary group leader Georg Pazderski criticized: “Why do all passengers flying to, from and in Germany actually have to wear a mask, but Marie-Antoinette Habeck doesn’t?”

The accompanying deputy editor-in-chief of the portal “The Pioneer”, Gordon Repinski, wrote that he considered the risk of infection on a flight before which all occupants had been PCR tested to be minimal. “Does it still look stupid when such pictures become public? Totally. It’s one more example of how a patchwork of rules only destroys trust.”

For airplanes – as well as for long-distance trains – after the end of many other corona rules, a nationwide mask requirement for passengers and staff continues to apply. They may only use air transport and long-distance public transport if they wear an FFP2 mask or a medical mask during transport, as specified in paragraph 28b of the Infection Protection Act. Children under the age of six are exempt from this obligation. The mask can only be removed while eating and drinking.


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