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Coronavirus: What it's like in German quarantine

Rebecca Staudenmaier
February 3, 2020

The German military recently flew back over 100 people from the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak — with two people on board testing positive for the virus. DW spoke with one of the evacuees about life in quarantine.

https://p.dw.com/p/3XCNu
Patients arrive at the facility in Germersheim
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Rumpenhorst

A coronavirus evacuee speaks

Yannik Weis was studying abroad in the Chinese city of Wuhan when a deadly new type of coronavirus broke out. He became one of over 100 people Germany evacuated from the area over the weekend.

Although he and many other German evacuees are feeling healthy and in good spirits, Weis told DW on Monday that coming back to Germany in light of the outbreak had been "stressful."

He and 114 other evacuees are being kept in quarantine at a military base in the town of Germersheim, which is 120 kilometers (75 miles) south of Frankfurt. Weis said that they've been treated well at the base and that there "is a lot of medical support."

"If we leave our rooms, we have to wear a mask. Of course we are allowed to go outside to get some fresh air, but all the time we have to wear masks," Weis said.

A military barrack in Germersheim which is being used to quarantine German nationals flown out of China amid the new coronavirus outbreak
Evacuees are being housed in a military barracks in Germersheim — where they will have to stay under quarantine for at least 14 daysImage: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Rumpenhorst

Two of the German evacuees who were on the flight with Weis ended up testing positive for the virus and are currently being treated at a hospital in Frankfurt.

"Everybody in the airplane wore masks all the time. So I think the risk of getting infected there was very very small," Weis said.

He added that he thinks the quarantine is a necessary step in order to stop possible spread of the outbreak.

Empty streets 'but no panic' in Wuhan

Prior to the outbreak and the subsequent orders to remain in doors, Weis said the busy metropolis of Wuhan was "full of life."

"Everything was full of people. And suddenly after the outbreak ... the streets were empty," Weis noted.

He added that, despite the sudden shift in daily life in the city, people reacted calmly to the changes.

"Everyone was very silent and calm, but there was definitely no panic," he said.

There have been 10 confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany so far, most of which are based in the southern state of Bavaria.

China has effectively shut down the city of Wuhan and many surrounding provinces and municipalities in a bid to halt the spread of the virus.

At least 361 people have died from the coronavirus so far, surpassing the SARS epidemic that left 249 dead between 2002 and 2003.

Over 17,000 people in China are currently infected, with over 24 countries also reporting cases.

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