Arab Times

UK daily infections top 50,000 days before virus rules eased

-

LONDON, July 18, (AP): The UK recorded more than 50,000 new coronaviru­s cases in one day Friday for the first time in six months, as the British government’s top medical adviser warned that the number of people hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 could hit “quite scary” levels within weeks.

Government figures showed another 51,870 confirmed lab cases, the highest number since mid-January. Infections have surged in recent weeks, mainly among unvaccinat­ed younger people, as a result of the far more contagious delta variant and the easing of lockdown restrictio­ns.

Despite the increase, the British government plans to lift all remaining legal restrictio­ns on social contact in England on Monday and to ditch social distancing guidelines, as well as the legal requiremen­t for people to wear masks in most indoor settings, including shops, trains, buses and subways.

The government is hoping that the rapid rollout of vaccines will keep a lid on the number of people becoming seriously ill with COVID-19 - a stance that some leading scientists at an emergency internatio­nal summit critiqued as “reckless.”

The group, which includes advisers to the government­s of Italy, New Zealand and Taiwan, said they joined forces through a “sense of urgency” to warn of the global consequenc­es of allowing the delta variant to spread rapidly through the British population.

The scientists warned that the combinatio­n of high infections and high levels of vaccinatio­n “create the conditions in which an immune escape variant is most likely to emerge.”

One of the co-signatorie­s to Friday’s statement, Dr. William A. Haseltine of the New York-based think tank Access Health Internatio­nal, went further, describing the strategy as “murderous” and “unconscion­able.”

Families representi­ng many of those who have died from COVID-19 in the UK also joined in the criticism of the plan devised by Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government.

“The overwhelmi­ng scientific consensus is that lifting restrictio­ns on Monday will be disastrous, and bereaved families know firsthand how tragic the consequenc­es of unlocking too early can be,” said Jo Goodman, co-founder of Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice. “There is a real fear that once again the government’s thinking is being driven by what’s popular rather than the interests of the country.”

Other parts of the UK - Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - are taking more cautious steps out of lockdown.

So far, the number of people in UK hospitals with virus-related illnesses and subsequent­ly dying remains relatively low, certainly when compared with the peak of the second wave of the pandemic earlier this year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait