Leicester Mercury

Millions more set for UK lockdown

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MILLIONS more people in England will be placed into lockdown from Boxing Day as ministers acknowledg­ed mounting concern about the spread of coronaviru­s.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the variant coronaviru­s was spreading at a “dangerous rate” as he announced the fresh Tier 4 restrictio­ns.

He also said cases of another new mutant coronaviru­s linked to South Africa had been found in the UK and placed travel restrictio­ns on the country.

Areas moving to the toughest Tier 4 – where there is a stay-at-home order – from Boxing Day are: Sussex, Oxfordshir­e, Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridges­hire, those parts of Essex not yet in Tier 4, Waverley in Surrey and Hampshire, including Portsmouth and Southampto­n but with the exception of the New Forest.

Bristol, Gloucester­shire, Somerset including the North Somerset council area, Swindon, the Isle of Wight, the New Forest and Northampto­nshire as well as Cheshire and Warrington will all be escalated to Tier 3. Cornwall and Herefordsh­ire move from Tier 1 to Tier 2.

Mr Hancock told a Downing Street press

conference: “Just as we had got a tiered system in place that was able to control this virus we have discovered a new, more contagious virus – a variant that is spreading at a dangerous rate.”

The changes mean an additional six million people will be in a Tier 4 lockdown from Boxing Day.

This means a total of 24 million people will now be in Tier 4, or 43% of the population of England.

The Health Secretary set out details on the discovery of the South African variant in the UK. He said the two cases were contacts of people who have travelled from South Africa over the past few weeks. “This new variant is highly concerning because it is yet more transmissi­ble and appears to have mutated further than the new variant that has been discovered in the UK,” he said.

The Health Secretary said the cases and their close contacts have been quarantine­d.

He announced immediate restrictio­ns on travel from South Africa and the government is telling those who have been to the country in the last fortnight and their close contacts to quarantine immediatel­y.

The law will be changed to make that enforceabl­e, he added.

The challenge facing the government was underlined by official estimates showing the R value – the average number of people someone with coronaviru­s infects – has increased to 1.1 to 1.3, up from 1.1 to 1.2 a week ago. The number of new infections is growing by between 1% and 6% every day, up from 1% to 4% last week.

Professor Neil Ferguson, a member of the government’s New and Emerging Respirator­y Virus Threats advisory group (Nervtag), said he expected lockdown measures to help control the spread of the variant.

 ??  ?? Matt Hancock during yesterday’s briefing
Matt Hancock during yesterday’s briefing

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