THIS WILL HAUNT ME FOR AS LONG AS I LIVE
Visibly shattered, PM’s pained confession on night nation mourned Covid catastrophe
BORIS Johnson last night said he would be haunted by the Covid pandemic ‘for as long as I live’.
At a sombre press conference on the anniversary of the first lockdown, he admitted ‘many’ mistakes over the past 12 months. But the Prime Minister said he had faced ‘very, very hard decisions’ while grappling with a ‘callous and invisible enemy’.
Paying tribute to the millions who observed three lockdowns to bring the virus under control, he said: ‘We did it together. this is something that we will all remember and be dealing with in different ways for, certainly in my case, for as long as I live. It’s been an extraordinary moment in our history, a deeply difficult and distressing period.’
In reference to the death toll of 126,284, he added: ‘We’ve suffered so many losses, and for so many people our grief has been made more acute because we have not been able to see them in their final days to hold their hands, or even to mourn them together.’ Mr Johnson also pledged ‘a fitting and a permanent memorial to the loved ones we’ve lost’.
But he insisted that – with the vaccine programme rolling out at lightning speed – Britain was finally emerging from the shadow of coronavirus.
‘Cautiously but irreversibly, step by step, jab by jab this country is on the
path to reclaiming our freedoms,’ the Prime Minister said.
Asked whether the objective should be to eradicate Covid or simply bring down cases to the lowest levels, Mr Johnson replied: ‘I’m not sure eradication makes sense in a globalised economy.’
And he told a behind closed doors meeting of Tory MPs last night that a third wave of the virus was ‘ inevitable’, given rising cases across Europe
Chris Whitty, England’s chief medical officer, also acknowledged that a third wave would arrive in Britain – but it would be slowed by a ‘wall of vaccination’.
And, in a significant boost, it was reported that the Serum Institute of India is now asking for government permission to release a 5million batch of the AstraZeneca vaccine for export to Britain.
As Brussels prepared to publish plans today to curb vaccine exports, despite an offer of compromise from Britain:
◼ The PM risked inflaming the row by joking with Tory MPs that Britain’s vaccine success was down to ‘greed, my friends’ – before hastily withdrawing the remark;
◼ Downing Street said the roadmap for easing the lockdown remained ‘ on course’, despite concerns about jab supplies and new variants;
◼ However, ministers were braced for a rebellion from Tory MPs on a vote tomorrow to extend Covid regulations until the end of September;
◼ Mr Johnson played down hopes of the ban on European travel ending on May 17;
◼ And he hinted that ministers were looking at fresh restrictions at the border, potentially including more testing for lorry drivers;
◼ The PM also pledged to make the schools catch-up programme a national priority;
◼ Former cabinet minister David Davis warned introducing vaccine passports was likely to be illegal on grounds of discrimination;
◼ A row erupted over Government plans to require all care home staff to have the vaccine.
MPs and peers in both Houses of Parliament and ministers in the devolved nations marked the lockdown anniversary at midday, while NHS and social care workers also joined the pause for reflection.
A further vigil was held last night, with millions lighting candles in remembrance of a terrible year.
The Queen reflected on the ‘grief and loss felt by so many’ as she paid tribute to the service of health and care workers in a message to St Bartholomew’s Hospital, where the Duke of Edinburgh had heart surgery.
Professor Whitty acknowledged at the press conference that Britain had suffered a ‘ bad outcome’ from the pandemic, but stressed that many other countries had also struggled.
He had warned earlier that the UK was not out of the woods yet, with possible vaccine shortages and the emergence of new variants both causes for concern.
‘This is a sad day, really,’ he said. ‘The path does look better than the last year but there are going to be lots of bumps and twists on the road from here on in.’ He said there would ‘definitely be another surge at some point, whether it’s before winter or in the next winter, we don’t know’.
The professor also warned of the terrible toll taken on the nation’s health by the lockdown itself.
‘For many people, physical or mental wellbeing have been very badly affected by this,’ he said.
Mr Johnson said that, armed with better information, he might have made different decisions at critical moments.
But he added: ‘For month after month our collective fight against coronavirus was like fighting in the dark against a callous and invisible enemy, until science helped us to turn on the lights and gain the upper hand.’
Meanwhile, a further 412,197 vaccinations have been administered, taking the total number who have now received at least one dose to 28.3million.
Official figures showed a further 112 Covid-related deaths were recorded on Monday. The weekly death toll was down by a third. Case numbers and hospital admissions also fell again.
Professor Whitty said the fall in cases had ‘flattened off’ in recent days but this had ‘always been expected’ following the return of millions of children to school.
The number of deaths in England and Wales has dropped below weekly average levels for the first time in more than six months.
Figures compiled by the Office for National Statistics said the
‘Rapid decline in deaths’
10,987 deaths in the week that ended on Friday, March 12, were 511 fewer than the average for the time of year.
Professor Neil Ferguson, an infectious disease expert at Imperial College London, said: ‘The new ONS data on deaths is encouraging in suggesting the second devastating wave of the pandemic is behind us.
‘The rapid decline in deaths we’ve thankfully seen is entirely because of the lockdown and the rapid rollout of vaccines.’
Fears of a further wave of infections increased yesterday following confirmation that another coronavirus variant had reached the UK. Three people in England have been found to have the strain – dubbed the ‘New York’ variant, according to Public Health England.
Its officials are ‘monitoring the situation closely’ and working with partners around the world to identify variants and their potential impact. Many of the cases of the B.1.526 variant have been found to contain the E484K mutation, which may weaken the effectiveness of vaccines.
But health officials said the three cases of the New York variant that have so far been detected in the UK do not contain the E484K mutation, seen in South Africa and Brazil. They said that it was not a ‘variant of concern’, unlike the Kent variant which caused the latest lockdown.
Figures released by the ONS yesterday showed that – despite the third national lockdown – unemployment has fallen, with the jobless rate dipping from 5.1 per cent to 5 per cent in the three months to January.
‘The employment picture in the UK has stabilised in recent months, supported by the extension and increased generosity of the furlough scheme,’ said Pablo Shah,
managing economist at the Centre for Economics and Business Research. ‘The scheme will continue to contain labour market damage during the remaining months of lockdown, although the fragility of the economy means that a spike in unemployment is still anticipated in the fourth quarter of 2021 when support is lifted.’
Around a fifth of the workforce – or six million employees – are still on furlough and some will not have a job to return to when the scheme ends. The Government’s
budget watchdog predicted earlier this month that unemployment would rise to 6.5 per cent by the end of the year.
But forecasters at the EY Item Club downgraded its estimate from 7 per cent to 6 per cent, as has Capital Economics.