San Diego Union-Tribune

BRITAIN MAKES MASKS MANDATORY IN SHOPS

France may require people to wear them in indoor public places as infections begin to rise

- Elsewhere in Europe, where the virus curve largely flattened out months ago, most government­s made masks mandatory as soon as they started reopening their economies, requiring their use in shops and other indoor public spaces and on public transporta­tion.

Amid pervasive backslidin­g on social distancing, Britain has made masks mandatory in shops and France is weighing whether to require people to wear them in public places.

Scientists say the two countries’ government­s should have done so ever since they started easing lockdowns — like many other European nations did — instead of exposing their population­s to the risk of infections from mass dance parties and summer vacationer­s who think there’s no longer anything to worry about.

Whether to make masks mandatory isn’t just a matter of debate in the United States, where infection rates are still climbing fast.

After weeks of prevaricat­ion and days of confused messaging, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government said Monday that masks will be required in stores starting July 24.

Johnson’s office said “growing evidence that wearing a face covering in an enclosed space helps protect individual­s and those around them from coronaviru­s.” Those who flout the law can be fined up to 100 pounds ($125) by the police.

Critics had accused Johnson’s government of failing to provide clarity on mask-wearing in the days since he began backtracki­ng on its previous advice that suggested face covers were not necessary. After the prime minister then was photograph­ed wearing one in a shop, government ministers appeared on TV urging personal choice in the mask issue.

Meanwhile, France’s government said Monday it’s considerin­g requiring masks in all indoor public places amid signs of a small rise in confirmed virus cases — and a big drop in public vigilance. French scientists have pushed for such a requiremen­t in recent days as families crisscross the country for summer vacations, but the government has remained cautious.

Local mayors have already started requiring masks, notably in the Mediterran­ean city of Nice, where images of thousands of people dancing at an outdoor DJ performanc­e this weekend provoked nationwide concern.

March and April alone, the U.K. economy shrank 25 percent. Many economists think unemployme­nt could more than double to over 3 million this year, levels last seen in the 1980s.

Speaking with reporters during a visit to the London Ambulance Service, Johnson said people “should start to think about getting back to work” if their employers have made their workplaces safe against the coronaviru­s.

In France, restaurant­s, schools and many businesses reopened weeks ago. While mask use and social distancing were relatively widespread during the country’s strict home confinemen­t period and initially after it ended, many French people have since returned to the old normal — forgoing masks, resuming cheek-kissing and gathering in crowded cafes.

The French government “should’ve made it mandatory indoors right away” like in neighborin­g Spain and Italy, said 50-year-old Paulo Lorenzo, who says he usually wears a mask when he leaves the house. “Now it’s going to be a bit complicate­d.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been widely photograph­ed wearing a face mask or other type of facial covering as he has taken a lead role in the effort to contain coronoviru­s infections.
GETTY IMAGES British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been widely photograph­ed wearing a face mask or other type of facial covering as he has taken a lead role in the effort to contain coronoviru­s infections.

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