Denmark Officially Becomes First EU Country To Drop All Domestic COVID Restrictions
By
Sebastian Hughes
February 1, 2022

FILE PHOTO: Outside serving reopens in Denmark
Denmark lifted all domestic COVID-19 restrictions on Tuesday, becoming the first member of the European Union to do so, BBC News reported.
Case counts of the virus are still relatively high in
Denmark, but officials have said the high vaccination rate in the country means that COVID-19 is no longer a “critical threat,” BBC News
reported.
“We have an extremely high coverage of adults vaccinated with three doses,” epidemiologist Lone Simonsen of the University of Roskilde
told the AFP news agency. “With Omicron not being a severe disease for the vaccinated, we believe it is reasonable to lift restrictions.”
With the
restrictions rescinded, masks are no longer required to enter stores, restaurants or public transit, and limits on the number of people gathering indoors and mandatory social distancing measures have ended, BBC News reported. The national contact-tracing app also is no longer required, though individual event organizers can opt to make it a condition of entry.
Hospitals and care homes will still
mandate the use of face masks in hospitals and care homes, and some restrictions remain for unvaccinated travelers attempting to cross Denmark’s borders, BBC News reported.
“Good morning to a completely open Denmark,” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen wrote on Facebook, BBC News reported.
“No one can know what will happen next December. But we promised the citizens of Denmark that we will only have restrictions if they are truly necessary and we’ll lift them as soon as we can,” Danish Health Minister Magnus Heunicke
told CNN on Monday. “That’s what’s happening right now.”