Grimsby Telegraph

UK regions hit by fresh restrictio­ns

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HUGE parts of England’s North West, West Yorkshire and the Midlands face tough new restrictio­ns from Tuesday as Matt Hancock refused to rule out a national lockdown. Ministers announced a tightening of rules in response to “major increases” in Covid-19 cases in large areas of the North West and Yorkshire and parts of the Midlands.

In Merseyside, Warrington, Halton and Lancashire (excluding Blackpool and Greater Manchester), the following restrictio­ns will be enforced from Tuesday:

• Residents must not socialise with other people outside of their own households or support bubble in private homes and gardens

• Restaurant­s, pubs and bars will be restricted to table service only, while all leisure and entertainm­ent venues including restaurant­s, pubs and cinemas, must close between 10pm to 5am.

Residents are also advised to avoid public transport unless it is essential, as well as profession­al or amateur sporting events.

In the Midlands, people in Oadby and Wigston will be banned from socialisin­g with others outside of their own households or support bubble in private homes and gardens from Tuesday.

And in West Yorkshire, people in all parts of Bradford, Kirklees, Calderdale, will also be banned from socialisin­g with other people outside their household or bubble. Health Secretary, Matt Hancock said: “We are seeing cases of coronaviru­s rise fast in Lancashire, Merseyside, West Yorkshire, Warrington, Halton and Wolverhamp­ton. “Local leaders in these areas have asked for stronger restrictio­ns to be put in place to protect local people, and we are acting decisively to support them.

“I know these restrictio­ns will make everyday life harder for many, but I know residents will work together and respect the rules so we can reduce rates of transmissi­on. “I urge local people to isolate and get a test if you have symptoms, follow the advice of NHS Test and Trace, and always remember ‘hands, face, space’. By sticking to these steps, we will get through this together.” The announceme­nt comes after Mr Hancock said a second national lockdown to curb the spread of coronaviru­s has not been ruled out but the “great hope” is that people will heed current advice to help manage a “very serious” situation.

He said a national lockdown was the “last line of defence” as he responded to reports that ministers are considerin­g further national measures, even for just a twoweek period.

The Government is still under fire over the NHS Test and Trace system, which has seen up to four times the number of people trying to book a test as the number of tests available. Experts have said that, without effective testing and tracing, it will be much harder to control the spread of the virus and pinpoint larger outbreaks.

 ??  ?? Health Secretary Matt Hancock
Health Secretary Matt Hancock

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