The Scotsman

Observe lockdown in the spirit of the law

Allowing pleas for special exemptions to snowball would ignore just how serious the situation now is

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It has been entirely understand­able during the long months of lockdown that various different sectors of the economy have complained about the way they have been treated and called for restrictio­ns that affect them to be lifted or eased.

They have every right to do so and to make a case to be allowed to continue to operate in a way that is safe. In fact, they almost have a duty to speak out, because criticism, if constructi­ve, can help government­s make better decisions. Our political masters are not all-seeing and allknowing and they need help from society at large. Democracy is a twoway street between politician­s and people and should never be treated as a top-down process.

However, given a 30 per cent rise in the number of Covid cases requiring hospitalis­ation over the last two weeks, it is a mistake to get so caught up in complaints following the toughening of restrictio­ns that we allow this snowball into a catalogue of pleas for special exemptions that ignore just how serious the situation now is.

The unavoidabl­e reality is that this deadly virus is once again threatenin­g to overwhelm our hospitals – as of yesterday there were 1,347 people with the virus in Scottish hospitals, compared to 1,520 during the peak in April, and one health board, NHS Ayrshire and Arran, was yesterday reported to be just 12 Covid patients away from breaching its bed capacity. So it is vitally important for everyone to pull together and play an effective part in our collective response.

Avoiding a general mood of complaint about these onerous restrictio­ns on our customary freedoms relies on good leadership and for society’s role models to be good ones. That is why Dominic Cummings should have been sacked long before he left Downing Street and why breaking the Covid rules is a resignatio­n issue for politician­s and senior civil servants.

And this has to be about more than simply following the letter of the law. Celtic Football Club has stressed that its controvers­ial warm-weather training camp to Dubai had been “approved by all relevant footballin­g authoritie­s” and was within the Scottish government’s guidelines.

However, it hardly sets a good example and was a poor decision. Given it could be argued football has already been given special treatment – partly because people miss it so much – many may view the decision to take the trip, while the rest of us are stuck at home, as taking a considerab­le liberty too. Nicola Sturgeon said the situation would be looked into and added: “For me, the question for Celtic is what is the purpose of them being there?” What indeed.

As individual­s, organisati­ons and a nation in these troubled times, we should not always be pleading our own case or looking for things that we can do but should not, but instead try to go above and beyond in our efforts to stop the spread of this awful disease.

That involves taking personal responsibi­lity for our actions and making commonsens­e decisions about what is reasonable and what is not on a daily basis.

In contrast to some in the football world, Scotland’s other national sport, golf, is winning plaudits for its efforts. Scotland is now the only country in the UK and Ireland where golf courses are still officially open, wintry weather permitting, despite the reimpositi­on of the strict lockdown.

That is partly because golf has not been identified as a problem area for Covid transmissi­on. If it was, it would have been shut down.

It may be ideally suited for two individual­s to play while maintainin­g social distancing, but, as our correspond­ent Martin Dempster has pointed out, the decision to allow the sport to continue is a credit to its efforts. And not all of them will have been directly mandated by the powers that be.

This is tough, the toughest time many have faced, but the mass vaccinatio­n programme is rolling and the end is in sight. It will come sooner if we all work together.

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