Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

UK abandons ‘herd immunity’ logic after high fatality alarm

- Agence France-presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: Britain on Tuesday ramped up its response to the escalating coronaviru­s outbreak after the government imposed unpreceden­ted peacetime measures prompted by scientific advice that infections and deaths would spiral without drastic action.

More firms sent staff to work from home and public transport emptied after the government called for an end to “non-essential” social contact and unnecessar­y travel as confirmed cases climbed to more than 1,500 and deaths rose to 55.

Britons were only to travel abroad if absolutely necessary for the next 30 days, to avoid the risk of being stranded by border closures, airline cancellati­ons and stringent curfews.

“The speed and range of those measures across other countries is unpreceden­ted,” foreign secretary Dominic Raab told parliament. Tougher restrictio­ns are expected soon, including forcing people with serious health conditions to stay at home for three months to ease pressure on the already overburden­ed health service. The government was due to set out details of emergency laws in parliament, where members of the public have now been banned from attending debates, meeting lawmakers or visiting.

Police are expected to get powers to detain people to stop them from spreading the virus and hospitals allowed to send patients home to free bed space.

PM Boris Johnson has faced criticism for his approach to the pandemic, which had involved holding off on imposing the strict measures seen in other countries. But he stepped up the response after scientists warned hundreds of thousands could die in Britain if there was only a focus on delaying and slowing infections.

Thirty members of Imperial College London’s Covid-19 response team concluded in a paper that suppressio­n was “the preferred policy option” to curb the spread of the virus.

It would require “a combinatio­n of social distancing of the entire population, home isolation of cases and household quarantine of their family members”. “This type of intensive interventi­on package... will need to be maintained until a vaccine becomes available (potentiall­y 18 months or more),” the report stated. They predicted transmissi­on would “quickly rebound if interventi­ons are relaxed”, it added. The study’s lead author, epidemiolo­gist Neil Ferguson, is advising the British government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s, which is helping coordinate its Covid-19 response.

He said he had also shared the projection­s with US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion last week and sent it an early copy of the report over the weekend.

Johnson’s announceme­nt sparked concern about the impact on business, especially in the hospitalit­y industry, amid fears of an extensive economic fall-out from the outbreak.

Fashion chain Laura Ashley filed for administra­tion, putting up to 2,700 jobs at risk, while the British Beer and Pub Associatio­n warned thousands of jobs would be lost if pubs went to the wall without government interventi­on. Arts groups said they faced a “crippling blow” if audiences stayed away.

All events in London’s Trafalgar Square, including upcoming celebratio­ns for St George’s Day, Baisakhi and Eid, were cancelled until further notice, Mayor Sadiq Khan said.

Controvers­ially, remain open.

schools

 ??  ?? Commuters walk through a quiet Waterloo Station in London on Tuesday morning.
AFP
Commuters walk through a quiet Waterloo Station in London on Tuesday morning. AFP

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