Business Standard

Locking people up could prompt legal fights

- BLOOMBERG

The UK health secretary on Monday morning authorised an unpreceden­ted policy for stopping possible carriers of the coronaviru­s: Lock them up. It was the first time in modern British history that such a move has been made in response to an epidemic — and it could prompt legal challenges.

The law, introduced under emergency measures, gives the government the power to detain any individual­s who may be infected with the virus for at least 14 days, and to force them to give swabs. The decision came after a person in quarantine threatened to leave.

In the US, the government has resorted to similar laws. It’s the first time such a policy has been used in America since the 1960s, when a quarantine order was issued to stop the spread of smallpox, and more than a century since it was used on such a scale.

The measures stop well short of the response to the outbreak in China, where the authoritie­s have locked down cities and regions with tens of millions of residents. Still, the moves are unpreceden­ted in recent years for western democracie­s as government­s try to balance the need to protect public health against a desire to uphold individual rights.

‘Unusual step’

“The unusual step of government making regulation­s which came into force immediatel­y, before parliament­ary scrutiny of them, demonstrat­es the evolving nature of the threat from the virus and the challenges faced,” said Mark Mills, a London lawyer at Kingsley Napley, referring to the UK measures. “We might yet see the courts drawn in.” Britain has detained more than 200 people since the virus emerged, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. In the UK, nine people have tested positive for the virus, which has infected tens of thousands of people in China — far more than the severe acute respirator­y syndrome, or SARS, epidemic of 2003.

The last time the US government implemente­d such a wide-ranging quarantine using a federal order was in 1892 to prevent the spread of cholera from ships docking in New York, according to Howard Markel, a professor at the University of Michigan Center for the History of Medicine.

As in the UK, the new US measures were implemente­d after one person tried to leave a quarantine site.

Countries generally rely on people voluntaril­y submitting to quarantine measures for public safety. While the UK didn’t impose national restrictio­ns over SARS, the epidemic did lead to an overhaul of laws around public safety and infectious diseases, many of which dated to Victorian times. Revisions in 2008 sought to take into account modern risks of radiation and chemical contaminat­ion.

Britain has detained more than 200 people since the virus emerged, a source said

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