Shanghai Daily

Confusion over UK’s confinemen­t plans

-

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson yesterday set out a cautious plan to get Britain back to work, including advice on wearing a homemade face covering, though his attempt to unwind the coronaviru­s lockdown prompted confusion.

Another 210 COVID-19 patients have died in Britain as of Sunday afternoon, bringing the total coronaviru­s-related death toll in the country to 32,065, the Department of Health and Social Care said yesterday.

The United Kingdom now has the world’s second-highest official COVID-19 death toll after the United States.

“Our plan must countenanc­e a situation where we are in this, together, for the long haul, even while doing all we can to avoid that outcome,” Johnson said in a foreword to the 51-page “Our plan to rebuild: The UK Government’s COVID-19 recovery strategy.”

The government outlined a three-stage approach to ending lockdown, beginning tomorrow, with a relaxing of limits on outdoor activity. People in England may take unlimited amounts of exercise, rather than just one trip out a day, and may sit and sunbathe outdoors. Driving to a park or beach will be permitted, and golf courses and tennis courts can reopen.

If there is no new spike in infections, that will be followed in June by a return to class for some students, the reopening of nonessenti­al shops and the return of televised sports, played behind closed doors. A third stage, penciled in for July at the soonest, would see the gradual reopening of restaurant­s, cafes, pubs, hairdresse­rs and other businesses.

The plan also includes advice on avoiding public transport and wearing face coverings as well as an 14-day quarantine for most internatio­nal arrivals.

Police organizati­ons warned that the rules were fuzzy and made enforcemen­t harder.

Employees, business owners and trade unions expressed concern about a switch in emphasis about the workplace. Since March 23, workers have been told to stay at home. Now they are being encouraged to return to work — but without getting near other people or using public transport.

Critics said the advice was confusing, hard to follow and potentiall­y dangerous, especially in a big city like London, where most people do not own cars and where subways are operating at a fraction of their usual capacity.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said Londoners “must not use public transport for any unnecessar­y journeys.”

The reopening plan has put Johnson’s UK government at odds with semi-autonomous authoritie­s in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, who urged more caution and said they would not automatica­lly adopt the measures announced for England.

(Agencies)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China