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After 2 years, Bundesliga to have full stadiums from March 20

Official figures show Germany's Covid-19 infection rate is starting to drift downward

bundesliga-bayern-darmstadt-new [File] Bayern Munich fans at a Bundesliga match before the pandemic hit

Germany is scrapping most coronavirus restrictions and could have full stadiums at football games again in March, two years after the Bundesliga last operated at full capacity.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Wednesday after a meeting with the country's 16 state governors that they had agreed on plans to end almost all the country's measures against COVID-19 by March 20.

Official figures show Germany's infection rate is beginning to drift downward. The easing of restrictions under a new three-step plan takes effect from March 4, with an initial limit at stadiums of up to 25,000 supporters or 75 per cent capacity.

"In a third and final step from March 20, 2022, all far-reaching protective measures are to be dropped if the situation in hospitals allows," according to Wednesday's decision.

But football fans were already seeing the benefit of relaxed rules last weekend, when most games welcomed many more spectators than previously possible during the coronavirus pandemic.

Up to 15,000 fans were allowed at Leipzig vs Cologne to get the Bundesliga's 22nd round underway. Leipzig and other clubs such as Borussia Dortmund had taken legal action against their respective state governments to allow more fans to attend games.

Scholz said basic protective measures would remain an option under the new rules but he didn't elaborate.

There will hardly be any restrictions, he said of the remaining precautions against COVID-19 transmissions.

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