Los Angeles Times

Britain now under stay-home order

- By Christina Boyle

LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, facing criticism over a coronaviru­s-containmen­t strategy more lax than those of European neighbors, on Monday announced stringent new measures meant to keep people at home in the face of “the devastatin­g impact of this invisible killer.”

With the nation’s death toll surpassing 330, Johnson told Britons they should leave their homes only for essential shopping, limited exercise, medical care and “absolutely necessary” work. Police are empowered to impose fines on violators and break up gatherings, he said.

“From this evening I must give the British people a very simple instructio­n: You must stay at home,” the prime minister said in a somber nationwide address in which he urged a “huge national effort to halt the growth of this virus.”

The move came after many Britons flouted voluntary social-distancing guidelines over the weekend, flocking to parks and beaches. And social media users documented a crowded Monday-morning commute on London’s Undergroun­d, known as the Tube.

Like President Trump,

Johnson has taken reluctant steps toward imposing isolation measures that drasticall­y curtail economic activity. That prompted warnings from many public health experts, who said that without swift action, Britain’s chances of averting an Italystyle trajectory, with an onslaught of cases, were dimming.

Even in Italy, though, strict isolation measures appeared to be finally slowing down the death rate.

By government order, restaurant­s, pubs, gyms and other venues in Britain were already closed, and older residents and others who are vulnerable were advised last week to self-quarantine. But until now, Johnson’s government had eschewed the tough stay-indoors approach in countries such as Italy, Spain and France, or Germany, where more than two people congregati­ng in public is forbidden.

Johnson said in his prime-time speech that the new rules were essential to prevent the National Health Service, Britain’s already beleaguere­d universal healthcare system, from being overwhelme­d.

“To put it simply, if too many people become seriously unwell at one time, the NHS will be unable to handle it — meaning more people are likely to die, not just from coronaviru­s but from other illnesses as well,” he said. “So it’s vital to slow the spread of the disease.”

Johnson’s announceme­nt came hours after trains on the London Undergroun­d were packed during the Monday morning rush hour. That prompted many social media users to blast the government for seemingly exacerbati­ng — if inadverten­tly — the crowding, by reducing service and closing dozens of stations.

On Sunday, Britain celebrated its equivalent of Mother’s Day, and Johnson used the occasion to urge voluntary curbs on togetherne­ss.

In a message to the country, he said, “The single best present that we can give — we who owe our mothers so much — is to spare them the risk of catching a very dangerous disease.”

But many failed to heed the warning. In southwest London, the sprawling 2,500acre Richmond Park was closed Sunday to vehicle traffic in a bid to curb the influx of visitors. But nearby residents said crowds exceeded those even on summer holiday weekends.

Before the new rules were unveiled Monday night, Britain’s tabloids, which often voice full-throated disdain for bureaucrat­ic rules, took the unaccustom­ed role of urging people to obey instructio­ns to stay at least 6 feet apart and remain indoors as much as possible.

The Daily Mirror carried front-page photos of crowds packed onto a beach boardwalk with the headline “MADNESS.”

The Sun newspaper displayed a similarly packed-in view of London’s Clapham Common and warned in an editorial that “irresponsi­ble idiots” were about to prompt a crackdown in which Britons would be “forced to wave goodbye to our cherished freedoms.”

Critics, meanwhile, took increasing­ly scathing aim at Johnson in the hours leading up to his address.

“No more advice. Time to lead,” Perry Maddox, CEO of the youth-led developmen­t agency Restless Developmen­t, wrote on Twitter.

 ?? Daniel Leal-Olivas AFP/Getty Images ?? BRITAIN’S stringent measures came after commuters and others ignored social distancing guidelines.
Daniel Leal-Olivas AFP/Getty Images BRITAIN’S stringent measures came after commuters and others ignored social distancing guidelines.

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