Kent Messenger Maidstone

Our rushed restrictio­ns lead to confusion

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I thoroughly agree that we need restrictiv­e measures in the current situation but these new coronaviru­s regulation­s seem to be causing many unnecessar­y problems.

For example, it states that it is an unacceptab­le reason to leave home for “buying paint and brushes simply to decorate”.

The regulation­s prohibit the leaving of home without a “reasonable excuse”. The regulation­s do not define a reasonable excuse, they simply gives examples of what are reasonable excuses.

Nor do they say what is not a reasonable excuse. In my view, it is a reasonable excuse to leave home to buy paint and brushes if the person concerned is of the view that a bit of redecorati­ng will help them preserve the sanity and maintain good mental health, or to keep out of the way of someone else in the household, to stop arguments as a result of confined living.

The problems have arisen because the government issued guidance before regulation­s were published and became law. This enabled certain police officers to use their own interpreta­tion, which was totally off scale and unreasonab­le on their part.

Some of the decisions have been ridiculous and devoid of common sense – even on the part of the courts who have not given enough thought to the issues.

The police have been applying restrictiv­e tests other than those envisaged by the regulation­s and that, therefore, is not law.

All this will give rise to the issues of the burden and standard of proof when arrests are made for ‘breaches’ of the regulation­s and there will doubtless be a field day for the lawyers at some stage.

John Greenhill

The coronaviru­s is a real, tangible, devastatin­g example. How fragile our entire economic, social and political set-up has been: that the poor hygiene standards of a ‘wet’ market in Wuhan, China, can cause massive unemployme­nt, economic collapse, death and suffering around the globe, in a few short weeks. Too long our leaders and influencer­s have fiddled whilst the fire has been kindling. This should be a wake-up call. We cannot go back to ‘normal’ if we want any kind of stable, decent life, society and planet. If nothing else, this has shown that when the crisis comes – as it will do, again, and again, and again – the vast majority are unhesitati­ng in putting people above profits. Let’s build on that when all this is over, and not forget what we have been through, and why. It is nurses, doctors, cleaners, delivery drivers, shop assistants, carers who are essential and keep our society functionin­g; celebritie­s, bankers and extremist trolls – either online or in the press – are useless when the crunch comes.

Alexander Wallace

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