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Germany's Bavaria plans free coronavirus tests at airports

The German state of Bavaria will soon start offering free coronavirus tests at airports for people returning from holiday.

  (Agence France-Presse)
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Mon, July 20, 2020

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Germany's Bavaria plans free coronavirus tests at airports Patient Heike Abicht poses for a photo for a testing situation in a corona screening station in the medical center of the Franz-Josef-Strauss airport in Munich, southern Germany, on July 10, 2020, amid the new coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic. (AFP/Christof Stache)

T

he German state of Bavaria will soon start offering free coronavirus tests at airports for people returning from holiday, state premier Markus Soeder said Sunday.

Germany has fared better than many of its neighbors in suppressing the virus but concerns are mounting that travellers returning from abroad could bring a surge in new COVID-19 cases.

"I think we really need to focus on these returning holidaymakers," Soeder told broadcaster ZDF.

He said local authorities were working on installing testing centers at Bavarian airports "where anyone can be tested for free any time".

The scheme is expected to be up and running within days.

Bavaria is home to Munich airport, Germany's second-largest after Frankfurt, as well as several smaller airports.

Frankfurt airport also has a coronavirus testing center but the service there costs between 59 and 139 euros ($67-159).

Read also: Germany alarmed at tourists partying in Mallorca

The southern state of Bavaria was among Germany's hardest hit regions early on in the pandemic, partly because of residents coming back from ski holidays in coronavirus hotspots in Austria.

A beer festival in the Bavarian town of Mitterteich shortly before the March lockdown began has also been blamed for contributing to the spread.

Since then however Bavarian state premier Soeder has won widespread praise for his handling of the crisis, including resisting calls for a premature easing of coronavirus restrictions.

Soeder, who is also the leader of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Bavarian CSU sister party, has seen his poll ratings soar as a result.

He is now Germans' preferred candidate to succeed Merkel after she steps down next year -- even though he is not officially in the running.

Soeder has repeatedly said "my place is in Bavaria" but observers believe he may yet join the race.

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