Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Britain urges masks, sets partial reopening

First stage is OK on outdoor exercise

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

LONDON — The British government performed an about-face on masks Monday, telling people to cover their mouths and noses in shops, buses and subway trains. The change came as part of what Prime Minister Boris Johnson called the “first careful measures” to lift a nationwide lockdown imposed seven weeks ago to slow the spread of the new coronaviru­s.

A 50-page government document outlining cautious steps to ease restrictio­ns said “people should aim to wear a face-covering in enclosed spaces where social distancing is not always possible and they come into contact with others that they do not normally meet, for example on public transport or in some shops.”

That is a recommenda­tion rather than a rule, and people won’t be penalized if they don’t wear masks.

The government outlined a three-stage approach to ending its lockdown,

beginning Wednesday with a relaxing of limits on outdoor activity. People in England may take unlimited amounts of exercise, rather than just one trip out a day, and may sit and sunbathe outdoors. Driving to a park or beach will be permitted, and golf courses and tennis courts can reopen.

If there is no new spike in infections, the second phase of the plan would see primary schools and shops start to reopen June 1, while cultural and sporting events would be able to take place behind closed doors for broadcast, the government said.

That potentiall­y paves the way for the return of the U.K.’s soccer Premier League, whose clubs are currently discussing how to complete the current season, which still has 92 games remaining after the shutdown in March.

A third stage, penciled in for July at the soonest, would see the gradual reopening of restaurant­s, cafes, pubs, hairdresse­rs and other businesses.

Johnson told lawmakers that “if the alert level begins to rise, we will have no hesitation in putting on the brakes.”

Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty told reporters Monday there is now “a little room for maneuver.” He said the government’s plan to ease restrictio­ns has “risks,” but that they are “proportion­ate” to the benefits.

Johnson, who was hospitaliz­ed last month with a serious bout of covid-19, also said that within weeks the U.K. would impose a 14-day quarantine on people arriving by air. Travelers from Ireland and France will be exempt.

While many people welcomed the prospect of an end to lockdown, there was confusion about the measures, which were announced by Johnson in a televised speech almost 24 hours before the details were published.

“What the country needs at this time is clarity and reassuranc­e, and at the moment both are in pretty short supply,” said Keir Starmer, leader of the main opposition Labor Party.

In his TV appearance, Johnson also extended most of the restrictio­ns on daily life imposed March 23, including the closure of schools, restaurant­s and most shops.

Britain’s official coronaviru­s death toll stood Monday at 32,141, the highest in Europe and the second-highest in the world after the United States. While the number of new deaths and infections is falling, Johnson said it would be “madness” to loosen restrictio­ns so much that there is a new surge in cases.

But he made a dramatic shift in tone on the economy. Since March 23, workers have been told to stay at home. Now, Johnson said, “anyone who can’t work from home, for instance those in constructi­on or manufactur­ing, should be actively encouraged to go to work.”

He said workplaces should observe social distancing and people should avoid public transport if possible, traveling “by car, or even better by walking or bicycle.”

Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance said the focus of the government’s advice is keeping the spread of the disease as low as people reconnect by ensuring good hygiene: washing hands and avoiding touching shared surfaces.

Employees, business owners and trade unions expressed concern about the gear-change, saying the advice was confusing and potentiall­y dangerous — especially in a big city like London, where most people do not own cars and where subways are operating at a fraction of their usual capacity.

Some expressed fears that people in low-paid jobs, who are less likely to be able to work from home, will be put at risk. That concern was underscore­d by official statistics showing that men working as security guards, constructi­on workers, transit workers and shop assistants had experience­d higher-than-average mortality in the outbreak. Men overall are about twice as likely as women to die with the coronaviru­s.

London’s Waterloo station, usually the country’s busiest train hub, remained largely quiet Monday morning, but commuters venturing back to work said they worried that services would soon be thronged again.

Peter Osu, 45, who was returning to work at a constructi­on site for the first time since the lockdown started, said he felt nervous.

“People were sitting close together on the [subway] and others were having to stand,” he said. “There was no 2-meter [about 6½ feet] spacing. This is the first day. Can you imagine what it’s going to look like by the end of the week?”

The reopening plan has put Johnson’s government at odds with semi-autonomous authoritie­s in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, who urged caution and said they would not automatica­lly adopt the measures Johnson has announced for England.

Scotland’s pro-independen­ce First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, who differs with Johnson on many issues, said “the risk is still too great” to ease the lockdown, though she said Scots could now do unlimited outdoor exercise.

“But otherwise we are asking you to stick with lockdown for a bit longer — so that we can consolidat­e our progress, not jeopardize it,” she said.

“What the country needs at this time is clarity and reassuranc­e, and at the moment both are in pretty short supply.”

— Keir Starmer, leader of the main opposition Labor Party

 ?? (AP/Kirsty Wiggleswor­th) ?? Seats display social distancing instructio­ns Monday at Victoria Station in London.
(AP/Kirsty Wiggleswor­th) Seats display social distancing instructio­ns Monday at Victoria Station in London.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States