Minister in one of Germany’s wealthiest states commits suicide ‘over coronavirus worries’

30 Mar, 2020 01:24 / Updated 5 years ago

The finance minister in the German state of Hesse, Thomas Schaefer, has taken his own life. His colleagues said he was pushed over the edge by an inability to cope with the harsh economic fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Schaefer’s body was discovered near the speed railway track line in the town of Hochheim am Main on Saturday. Prosecutors said that the cause of his death was most likely suicide.

“We are in shock; we are in disbelief and above all we are immensely sad,” Volker Bouffier, head of the Hesse regional government, said of the passing of his close associate and fellow member of Angela Merkel’s CDU party.

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Hesse is one of the wealthiest states in Germany and home to Frankfurt am Main, which is regarded as the financial capital of Europe’s largest economy. The city hosts the Frankfurt Stock Exchange and the European Central Bank (ECB), as well as the HQs of Deutsche Bank and other major German companies.

Schaefer was credited with having contributed to the region’s success while serving as its finance minister for the last decade. The 54-year-old’s professional qualities were praised by many, and he was expected to eventually replace Bouffier as the state’s PM.

The coronavirus, however, dealt a massive blow to the system he so thoroughly tended for all those years, sending stocks into a freefall and locking the workforce at home in quarantine.

Bouffier recalled that Schaefer, who leaves behind a wife and two children, was working “day and night” in order to minimize the impact of the pandemic on businesses and employees, but the task turned out to be insurmountable. “We have to assume that he was deeply worried,” the PM said.

Germany has so far registered 62,095 coronavirus cases, with 541 patients succumbing to the disease. More than 721,000 people have been infected worldwide, with over 33,900 fatalities.

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