Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

U.K. locks down ahead of holiday

Amid a case surge, household mixing is banned in certain areas, and many shops are forced to close.

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A surge in coronaviru­s cases brings more shop closures and a ban on gatherings.

LONDON — Millions of people must cancel their Christmas get-togethers and most shops have to close in London and much of southern England, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Saturday as he imposed a new, stricter level of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns on the region to curb rapidly spreading infections.

Johnson said that the capital and large areas in southern England already placed at the highest level of the U.K. government’s threetiere­d coronaviru­s alert system would move into a new Tier 4 that required all nonessenti­al shops, hairdresse­rs and indoor leisure venues to close after the end of business hours Saturday.

With just days to go until Christmas, Johnson also announced that a planned easing of socializin­g rules that would have allowed up to three households to meet in “Christmas bubbles” from Dec. 23 to 27 would be canceled for Tier 4 areas and sharply curtailed in the rest of England.

“It is with a very heavy heart that I must tell you we cannot proceed with Christmas as planned,” Johnson said.

He said he concluded there was “no alternativ­e open to me” and people must sacrifice this Christmas to have a better chance of protecting the lives of loved ones.

No mixing of households will be allowed in Tier 4 except under very limited conditions outside in public places. Travel in and out of Tier 4 areas won’t be allowed unless essential. In the rest of England, people will be allowed to meet in Christmas bubbles for just one day instead of five, as the government originally planned.

The changes upend the plans of millions of people who were looking forward to gathering with family and friends this week and force scores to revise their travel plans at the last minute. Before Saturday, government officials maintained they would allow small, private gatherings to go ahead.

Although restaurant­s, pubs, bars and theaters in much of England were already closed and prepared for a bleak Christmas, all shops in Tier 4 areas that don’t sell food or medicine received only hours of notice that they had to shut down after Saturday until officials review the situation Dec. 30.

The British Retail Consortium said it was “hugely regrettabl­e news,” especially coming just two weeks after a monthlong lockdown in England ended and at the height of the year’s peak retail period.

“Retailers have invested hundreds of millions of pounds making stores COVID-secure for customers and staff,” said Helen Dickinson, the trade body’s chief executive. “For businesses, the government’s stop-start approach is deeply unhelpful.”

In announcing the more restrictiv­e category, Johnson said that a fast-moving new variant of the coronaviru­s that is more than 70% more transmissi­ble than earlier strains appears to be driving the rapid spread in London and southern England.

London now has the highest infection rates in England, and officials said the new mutation accounted for some 60% of the capital’s cases.

“There’s no evidence to suggest it is more lethal or causes more severe illness,” the prime minister stressed, or that vaccines will be less effective against it.

England’s chief medical officer, Chris Whitty, said the U.K. has alerted the World Health Organizati­on that the new variant identified last week appears to be accelerati­ng the spread of the virus.

The government’s scientific advisors came to that conclusion based on preliminar­y modeling figures, and they are continuing to analyze the available data, he said.

Viruses mutate regularly, and scientists have found thousands of different mutations among samples of the virus that causes COVID-19. But many of the changes have no effect on how easily the virus spreads or how severe symptoms are.

Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, told reporters after receiving notificati­on from England last week that the United Nations health agency had “no evidence this variant behaves differentl­y” and that it was similar to a variant initially reported among mink in Europe. She said scientists would study the virus strain to see if there might be any difference in how it prompts an immune response in people.

In Wales, authoritie­s said they decided to move up a lockdown planned for after Christmas, and people must stay home from 12:01 a.m. Sunday. The move will largely scrap Christmas gatherings in line with the rules for southern England.

Northern Ireland already said a fresh lockdown will start once Christmas is over.

U.K. officials reported 28,560 more confirmed cases Saturday and 534 additional deaths of people who had tested positive within the previous 28 days. The U.K. has Europe’s second-highest COVID-19 death toll behind Italy, standing at 67,177.

 ?? Alberto Pezzali Associated Press ?? SHOPPERS walk on London’s Regent Street before the limits took effect. “We cannot proceed with Christmas as planned,” said Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Alberto Pezzali Associated Press SHOPPERS walk on London’s Regent Street before the limits took effect. “We cannot proceed with Christmas as planned,” said Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

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