Germany cancels Oktoberfest for the second year running

Germany cancels Oktoberfest for the second year running over fears it could become Covid super spreader event

  • Germany’s iconic Oktoberfest has been cancelled for the second year running
  • Bavarian state premier Markus Soeder confirmed the cancellation on Monday
  • ‘The situation is too precarious,’ he said, adding social distancing would be practically impossible to implement in the classic beer tents 

Germany’s iconic Oktoberfest beer festival has been cancelled for the second year running due to the pandemic.

Holding big public events in Bavaria, including the annual Oktoberfest in the regional capital Munich, will not be feasible this year, Bavarian state premier Markus Soeder said on Monday after a meeting with city mayor Dieter Reiter.

‘In the classic beer tents at the big festivals, social distancing, masks and other measures are practically impossible to implement,’ Soeder said.

Germany’s iconic Oktoberfest beer festival has been cancelled for the second year running due to the pandemic. Above, punters at the festival in 2019 

Bavaria's State Prime Minister Markus Soeder during a press conference in Munich, southern Germany, on May 3, during which he said: 'In the classic beer tents at the big festivals, social distancing, masks and other measures are practically impossible to implement'

Bavaria’s State Prime Minister Markus Soeder during a press conference in Munich, southern Germany, on May 3, during which he said: ‘In the classic beer tents at the big festivals, social distancing, masks and other measures are practically impossible to implement’

‘The situation is too precarious,’ he added. ‘Imagine there was a new wave and it then became a superspreader event. The brand would be damaged forever and we don’t want that.’

Reiter said the cancellation was ‘a great pity’ for the millions of fans of the festival, with ‘existential consequences’ for people’s livelihoods.

The event, which draws around six million visitors annually from late September to October, was cancelled in 2020 for the first time since World War II.

But the Oktoberfest has previously fallen victim to epidemics – cholera kept the beer tents empty in 1854 and 1873.

Reiter said the cancellation was 'a great pity' for the millions of fans of the festival, with 'existential consequences' for people's livelihoods. Above, people cheers with huge pints of beer at the start of the 2019 Oktoberfest

Reiter said the cancellation was ‘a great pity’ for the millions of fans of the festival, with ‘existential consequences’ for people’s livelihoods. Above, people cheers with huge pints of beer at the start of the 2019 Oktoberfest 

With Germany’s vaccination effort picking up pace and new infection numbers beginning to slow, the government was Monday weighing new freedoms for those who have been vaccinated.

Some states have already lifted contact restrictions for vaccinated people, with the government planning national rules by the end of the week.

But Finance Minister Olaf Scholz told the Funke media group on Monday there was ‘still not much to be said’ for a large event like the Oktoberfest.

‘We should hold off on large crowds in a confined space for the time being,’ he said.

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