Stanislaw Denis from Poland was the first corona test person from Poland to be tested in the container at the Linken border crossing in the presence of Prime Minister Manuela Schwesig (SPD).
Quelle: Christian Rödel
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Stanislaw Denis is someone who crosses the border every day professionally. The psychotherapist lives in Germany and travels to Stettin every day for work. He very much welcomes the fact that a test center is now being built right on the border. Instead of the previous 35 euros, he will only have to pay ten euros per test in the future. The state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania bears part of the costs.
Denis is the first customer at the test counter. Samples can be taken from the container window within a minute. The Pole receives the result on his mobile phone after 15 minutes: negative.
How do commuters contribute to the infections?
Within the state government, the project was promoted by Vorpommern State Secretary Patrick Dahlemann (SPD) and State Secretary for Economic Affairs Stefan Rudolph (CDU). It’s about specialists in hospitals and homes, in hotels and restaurants. “We need a cross-border security for skilled workers that is more robust than before,” says Rudolph.
The samples are examined by scientists from the University Medicine Greifswald and are also intended to show the proportion of commuters actually contributing to the spread of the infection. “The evaluation in four weeks will clarify whether the virus can be described as a driver in border mobility or not,” says State Secretary Dahlemann.
Request for free tests
For some cross-border commuters, that doesn’t go far enough. They have come together in the citizens’ initiative “Free Frontier”. Bartosz Marosz demands that if Germany introduces compulsory testing, it will have to bear all of the costs. “Those who earn 1,300 euros find it difficult to pay 40 euros per week.” It would be best to completely abolish the test requirement for those affected by small border traffic. “The tests put a strain on our wallets, our freedom and our health.”
The Polish lawyer Rafal Malujda thinks that the current solution is a good compromise. “For us commuters, the test centers are a huge relief,” he said. “We no longer have to waste a lot of time and money to get tests and to be able to cross the border.” His greatest fear: Germany closes the border with Poland because the infection rates in the neighboring country are increasing.
From Martina Rathke
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