National Post

Pints in pubs and cautious hugging get the OK

- Kate holton Guy Faulconbri­dge and

LONDON • British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday gave the green light to cautious hugging and the serving of pints inside pubs after months of strict restrictio­ns as he set out the next phase of coronaviru­s lockdown easing in England.

Johnson confirmed that England could continue to the next stage of his fourstep plan to bring the country out of lockdown by the summer, as the COVID-19 situation improved thanks to the rollout of vaccines and social restrictio­n measures.

“This unlocking amounts to a very considerab­le step on the road back to normality and I am confident that we will be able to go further,” Johnson told a media conference.

“We are announcing the single biggest step on our road map, and it will allow us to do many of the things that we’ve yearned to do for a long time.”

Under Step 3, from May 17 people will be permitted to meet up indoors for the first time in months, in groups of up to six people or two full households together.

Pubs, cafés and restaurant­s will be able to host customers indoors, also for the first time in months and subject to certain rules. Other indoor entertainm­ent like cinemas and sports venues will also be able to resume activity.

Johnson said the government would allow families and close friends to make their own choices on social contact, but urged people not to throw caution to the wind and said social distancing must continue in workplaces, shops and restaurant­s.

“Whoever I hug, I can assure you, it will be done with caution and restraint,” Johnson said, adding that the “1 metre plus” social-distancing rule in businesses might be dispensed with in the next stage of easing on June 21.

He appeared to rule out accelerati­ng the end of restrictio­ns, saying the success of Britain’s road map thus far had been helped by the ability to gather and monitor data.

“It’s by being prudent and being cautious that we’ve been able to make the progress that we have,” he said.

According to Johns Hopkins data, Britain has the fifth-highest death toll in the world from COVID-19 with 127,609 fatalities. Two-thirds of adults in the United Kingdom have had a first vaccine and one-third have had both doses.

The reopening will apply to England only, with the semi-autonomous government­s of Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales setting out their own rules.

On Monday, the chief medical officers of those nations also lowered the COVID-19 alert level, meaning that an epidemic is in general circulatio­n but transmissi­on is no longer high or rising exponentia­lly.

In a statement, the medical officers said social distancing and the rapid vaccine rollout had helped to bring coronaviru­s cases and daily deaths down sharply.

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