Malta Independent

UK’s Johnson delays lockdown easing for England by 4 weeks

-

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson confirmed that the next planned relaxation of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in England will be delayed by four weeks, until July 19, a decision he said will save thousands of lives as the government speeds up its vaccinatio­n drive.

In a press briefing, Johnson voiced his confidence that the new date for the lifting of restrictio­ns on social contact will be the final one as the vaccinatio­n drive is accelerate­d to counter the delta variant that scientists reckon is between 40% and 80% more transmissi­ble than the previous dominant strain in the U.K.

“I think it is sensible to wait just a little longer,” he said. “Now is the time to ease off the accelerato­r, because by being cautious now we have the chance in the next four weeks to save many thousands of lives by vaccinatin­g millions more people.”

He said that by July 19, twothirds of the adult population will have been double-vaccinated, including everyone over the age of 50, and that everyone over the age of 18 will have been offered a jab, earlier than the previous target of the month’s end. The gap between the two doses for over 40s is also being reduced to eight weeks from 12 to provide the maximum protection against the variant sooner.

New analysis on Monday from Public Health England showed that two doses of the main vaccines in the U.K.’s rollout are highly effective against hospitaliz­ation from the delta variant, which was first identified in India. It said the Pfizer vaccine is 96% effective against hospitaliz­ation after 2 doses while the AstraZenec­a jab is 92% effective.

“It’s unmistakab­ly clear the vaccines are working and the sheer scale of the vaccine rollout has made our position incomparab­ly better than in previous waves,” Johnson said.

Under the government’s plan for coming out of lockdown, all restrictio­ns on social contact were set to be lifted next Monday. Many businesses, particular­ly those in hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent, voiced their disappoint­ment about the delay to what had been dubbed by the British media as “Freedom Day.” Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber has been particular­ly upset at the prospect of a delay and has said he will reopen his theaters regardless, a move that would risk him being arrested.

A delay is a particular­ly bitter pill for nightclubs, as they have not been allowed to reopen since March 2020.

It will also likely impact how many fans are allowed into the Wimbledon tennis tournament and the European Championsh­ip soccer matches at Wembley Stadium, which will host the tournament’s semi-finals and final. However, actual numbers may be higher at certain events as Johnson said the government will carry on with its test program to allow more fans into stadiums.

The Confederat­ion of British Industry said the delay is “regrettabl­e” but “understand­able” and urged the government to provide more support to those businesses affected.

“But we must acknowledg­e the pain felt by businesses in hospitalit­y, leisure and live events,” said the CBI’s director-general Tony Danker. “At best they’re operating with reduced capacity hitting revenues, and at worst, some aren’t open at all.”

When Johnson first outlined the government’s four-stage plan for lifting the lockdown in England in February, he set June 21 as the earliest date by which restrictio­ns on people gathering would be lifted. However, he stressed at the time that the timetable was not carved in stone and that all the steps would be driven by “data not dates” and would seek to be “irreversib­le.”

Though daily infections have increased threefold over the past few weeks they are still way down from the nearly 70,000 daily cases recorded in January. On Monday, the British government reported 7,742 new confirmed cases, one of the highest daily numbers since the end of February. The delta variant accounts for around 90% of all new infections. The number of peopled being hospitaliz­ed with the virus has edged up over recent days.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta