The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

People in England cautioned against visiting Scotland in lockdown exit plan

- DAN O’DONOGHUE

The Westminist­er government has reinforced the message cautioning English people not to visit Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland.

A new guidance document, entitled “Our Plan to Rebuild: The UK Government’s Covid-19 recovery strategy”, asks those living in England to “respect the rules” but gives no guidance on how they will be enforced.

It states: “When travelling to outdoor spaces, it is important that people respect the rules in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and do not travel to different parts of the UK where it would be inconsiste­nt with guidance or regulation­s issued by the relevant devolved administra­tion.

“Different parts of the UK have different R figures. The devolved administra­tions are making their own assessment­s about the lifting of measures in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.”

The UK Government plan includes provisions for people to leave home for purposes other than exercise, meaning for the first time in two months people in England will be able to sit in parks, play sports, drive to the countrysid­e and beaches and visit people from outside their own household.

The condition for allowing such actions will be a strict observance of the two-metre social distancing rule and an understand­ing that large gatherings, outside one household, are still not permitted.

The document also sets out that guidance will be issued later this week to companies on how to make workplaces “Covid-secure” in a bid to allow certain parts of the economy to start-up again.

On travel, the UK Government says it is working with public transport providers “to bring services back towards pre-covid-19 levels as quickly as possible”.

The guidance also states that the UK Parliament “must set a national example” and “get back to business as part of this next step, including a move towards further physical proceeding­s” – raising questions over whether Scottish MPS should ignore advice from Holyrood and travel to Westminste­r.

The relaxing of measures in England caused widespread concern in the devolved nations yesterday, with Nicola Sturgeon saying a break from the “stay at home” could cause unnecessar­y deaths.

Asked about the different approaches of the UK’S four nations, UK chief medical adviser Professor Chris Whitty said: “We are confident that the risk of being outdoors, provided with social distancing, is quite small and will not have a material effect.

“Against that, there are very clear health benefits to exercise and there are also clear benefits to making this sustainabl­e.

“We’ve got to do this for the long haul, it’s really important to understand that, taking a very small risk for something which means it is more sustainabl­e for people to do has some clear benefits.

“We’re not claiming there are no risks, but what we think is they are very small and proportion­ate to the advantage.”

In the foreword of the plan, Boris Johnson states the “only feasible long-term solution lies with a vaccine or drug-based treatment”, but warns that could still be more than a year away.

The devolved administra­tions are making their own assessment­s about the lifting of measures.

UK GOVERNMENT GUIDANCE DOCUMENT

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