Daily Tribune (Philippines)

England lifts Covid curbs

So this is the right moment, but we’ve got to do it cautiously

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LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) — The British government on Monday lifted pandemic restrictio­ns on daily life in England, scrapping all social distancing rules in a step slammed by scientists and opposition parties as a dangerous leap into the unknown.

From midnight (2300 GMT Sunday), nightclubs reopened and other indoor venues were allowed to run at full capacity, while legal mandates covering the wearing of masks and working from home were scrapped.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson — who is self-isolating after his health minister was infected — urged the public to remain prudent and for any laggards to join the two-thirds of UK adults who are now fully vaccinated.

He defended the reopening — dubbed "freedom day" by some media — despite scientists' grave misgivings after daily infection rates in Britain topped 50,000, behind only Indonesia and Brazil.

We are against opening up without any precaution­s in place.

"If we don't do it now, then we'll be opening up in the autumn, the winter months, when the virus has the advantage of the cold weather," the prime minister said in a video message.

This week's start of summer school holidays offered a "precious firebreak," he said.

"If we don't do it now, we've got to ask ourselves, when will we ever do it? So this is the right moment, but we've got to do it cautiously."

In a bid to demonstrat­e a bit of caution, vaccines Minister Nadhim Zahawi told the BBC he would continue to wear a mask in "crowded indoor places".

But Jonathan Ashworth, the opposition Labor party's health spokesman, said the government was being "reckless," echoing experts who say the reopening endangers global health.

"We are against opening up without any precaution­s in place," Ashworth told BBC television, attacking in particular the government's plan on masks.

A new chapter

After the success of the vaccinatio­n program — which has now offered at least one dose to every adult in Britain — the government says any risks to hospital care are manageable.

If we don’t do it now, we’ve got to ask ourselves, when will we ever do it? So this is the right moment, but we’ve got to do it cautiously.

But professor Neil Ferguson from Imperial College London warned that Britain was on course for 100,000 cases a day, as the Delta variant runs out of control.

"The real question is, do we get to double that or even higher?" he told BBC television.

"We could get to 2,000 hospitaliz­ations a day, 200,000 cases a day, but it's much less certain," he said.

Despite the risks, in Leeds in northern England, there was a queue outside Fibre, a night club reopening on Sunday evening, and the dance floor was packed with no masks in sight.

"I thought, well, we missed New Year's, so why not come out and celebrate?" said Nicola Webster Calliste, 29.

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