The Scotsman

Caution must still be the watchword

Brighter days may seem to be within our grasp but we cannot move too soon on easing lockdown

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It has become the grim daily marker of the devastatio­n caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The daily statistics which are published each lunchtime have almost become run-of-the-mill, often even passing without comment.

The Scotsman reports them every day – without fail.

These are not just numbers. Noone should ever forget what they represent – they are the lives of neighbours, relatives and friends taken too soon.

Yesterday, the statistics showed another 559 positive coronaviru­s tests in the previous 24 hours in Scotland, but no new deaths for the first time in a month. Even with the caveat of a weekend reporting lag, zero deaths has to be positive news.

As vaccinatio­ns continue, and amid talk of staycation­s back on this summer, brighter days certainly seem to be within our grasp.

But caution has to continue to be the watchword in the weeks ahead as our thoughts turn to relaxing restrictio­ns.

It is natural to want things to return to a semblance of normality as quickly as possible, we all do, but this cannot be at the risk of infections – and the inevitable death toll – rising again.

Boris Johnson yesterday pledged a “cautious but irreversib­le” approach to easing lockdown in England.

All the evidence suggests Nicola Sturgeon will be even more cautious north of the Border, as demonstrat­ed by the current quarantine row.

Neither leader will want to damage the progress that has been made as the route out of this nightmare is weighed up.

Importantl­y, no-one in Edinburgh or London will want to risk easing restrictio­ns simply to have to later U-turn and plunge the country into another devastatin­g lockdown.

When Scotland and the UK emerges from lockdown it has to be for good, giving business certainty and the population confidence in leading their daily lives. That will be a long and delicate process, but cannot be rushed.

Everyone on The Scotsman longs for the day when we will no longer be reporting the Scottish Government’s bulletin every lunchtime, and when reports of dozens of deaths can never again seem ‘normal’. We will continue though until that number is zero – every day.

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