The Borneo Post

Drunk people can’t socially distance, UK police conclude

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LONDON: Britain’s police said Sunday that revellers who packed London’s Soho district the night pubs finally reopened made it “crystal clear” that drunk people cannot socially distance. England’s hospitalit­y sector sprung back to life after a threemonth coronaviru­s hiatus on what the media dubbed as either ‘ Super Saturday’ or ‘Independen­ce Day’. Pubs and restaurant­s were allowed to start seating clients and barbers could get their clippers out for the first time since March. But Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced queries about why he decided to schedule the grand reopening for a Saturday instead of a potentiall­y less chaotic Monday. Johnson said Friday that it would not have made much of a difference either way. But the head of Britain’s police federation said he ended up dealing with “naked men, happy drunks, angry drunks, fights and more angry drunks” while on shift. “What was crystal clear is that drunk people can’t/won’t socially distance,” John Apter told

London radio.

He said his own police department in the southern city of Southampto­n “managed to cope”.

“I know other areas have had issues with officers being assaulted,” Apter said.

A scan of police reports from

Saturday night showed a similar level of mischief-making across England.

Officers in the southweste­rn Devon and Cornwall region had logged up nearly 1,000 reports of “drink-related disorder and anti-social behaviour” by late Saturday. There were also reports of illegal raves in London and the northeast that resulted in mass arrests as well as disorder in the north Midlands.

Pubs in Wales and Scotland will partially reopen by mid-July while those in Ireland have had table service since Friday.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? (From left) St Thomas Hospital director of Infection and consultant Dr Nick Price, Johnson and Ward Sister Jenny McGee sharing a joke as the Prime Minister talks to the NHS staff that cared for him while he was in Intensive Care in central London.
— AFP photo (From left) St Thomas Hospital director of Infection and consultant Dr Nick Price, Johnson and Ward Sister Jenny McGee sharing a joke as the Prime Minister talks to the NHS staff that cared for him while he was in Intensive Care in central London.

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