England to ease COVID-19 curbs further on May 17
Chief medical officers agreed to lower the COVID-19 alert level to 3, which means the epidemic is in general circulation, from 4, which means transmission is high or rising exponentially
The United Kingdom’s chief medical officers on Monday agreed to lower the COVID-19 alert level to 3, which means the epidemic is in general circulation, from 4, which means transmission is high or rising exponentially.
“Thanks to the efforts of the UK public in social distancing and the impact we are starting to see from the vaccination programme, case numbers, deaths and COVID hospital pressures have fallen consistently,” the UK’S four chief medical officers said in a joint statement.
“However COVID is still circulating with people catching and spreading the virus every day so we all need to continue to be vigilant. This remains a major pandemic globally.”
England will press ahead with plans to ease COVID-19 restrictions further on May 17, including allowing people to meet indoors, thanks to favourable data on infections and vaccines, the government said on Sunday.
The country is in the process of gradually liting its latest lockdown over a period of months, in line with a four-step plan unveiled in February.
Under Step 3 of the plan, as outlined when it was first announced, people will be allowed to meet up indoors for the first time in months, in groups of up to six people or two full households together.
Pubs, cafes and restaurants will be able to host customers indoors, also for the first time in months and subject to certain rules. Other indoor entertainment, hospitality and sports venues will also be able to resume activity.
Johnson’s Downing Street office said the latest data on COVID vaccinations, on infections, hospitalisations and deaths, and on the risk posed by new variants had been taken into account in deciding to move forward with Step 3.
“The data reflects what we already knew - we are not going to let this virus beat us,” Johnson said, according to a Downing Street statement.
“The roadmap remains on track, our successful vaccination programme continues - more than two thirds of adults in the UK have now had the first vaccine - and we can now look forward to unlocking cautiously but irreversibly.”
Semi-autonomous administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have their own separate timetables for easing COVID restrictions.
The United Kingdom has lost more than 127,000 people to COVID-19.
It experienced a devastating second wave that peaked in late January, but since then the numbers of new cases and deaths have plummeted.
On Sunday, a total of 1,770 new cases and two new deaths were recorded across the United Kingdom.
That contrasts with the situation during the second wave, when the daily number of new cases peaked at over 80,000 while the daily death toll was above 1,300 on the worst day.
There are also expected to be significant changes for the arts and events sectors under Step 3, with both indoor and outdoor venues allowed to host far greater numbers of people than for many months.
The government had already confirmed last week that international travel would be allowed to resume on May 17, although still with severe restrictions in place except for a handful of countries.
Britain’s parliamentary standards watchdog confirmed Monday it is investigating Prime Minister Boris Johnson over how he paid for a luxury Caribbean holiday, the latest of multiple probes into his conduct.
Kathryn Stone, the current Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, is looking into the controversial trip to the privately owned island of Mustique over Christmas 2019 by the UK leader and his fiancee Carrie Symonds.
Johnson, who was buoyed by successful local election results in England last week, has long been dogged by questions about the holiday.
In the register of MPS’ interests, he claimed the £15,000 ($21,200, 17,400 euros) trip was provided by David Ross, a businessman and donor to his ruling Conservative party.
However there was confusion ater Ross initially denied handing over any money, and later clarified that it was a “benefit in kind.”
Johnson’s Downing Street office has previously insisted all relevant “transparency requirements” were correctly followed.