Lorries queue up at German-Czech border after virus checks introduced

Tailbacks stretching back several kilometres have developed on the Czech roads leading to the German border, after Germany declared its neighbour a risk zone due to a coronavirus variant and reintroduced checks for incoming travellers.
On the E55/D8 autobahn connecting
Prague with Dresden, lorries were queuing all the way back to Usti nad Labem on
Monday morning. Police were stopping drivers before letting them enter the
tunnel there.
On the E50/D5, which leads to the
German city of Nuremberg, a queue of lorries initially grew to over 20
kilometres long, according to the motorway administration office and radio
traffic news.
On Sunday, Germany launched entry
bans at its borders with the Czech Republic and the Austrian region of Tyrol, due
to concerns about more virulent strains of the novel coronavirus in those areas.
There are exceptions for key
workers who have to commute across the borders, including lorry drivers, and
for German citizens or foreigners resident in Germany.
Those people have to register
online and present a negative coronavirus test at the border, which must be no
older than 48 hours.
Czech authorities have boosted
their testing capacity in border regions in response to the travel ban, using
the fire brigade for example to set up additional facilities.
The Czech Republic forms a key part of the supply chain for many German firms. Some carmakers have already warned that the restrictions could once again bring factories to a standstill.