Global Times - Weekend

‘Panic’ as Omicron crisis bites

- AFP Page Editor: wanghuayun@ globaltime­s.com.cn

Soaring Omicron cases left

Britons scrambling to make alternativ­e Christmas plans, faced with cancelatio­ns, long queues for vaccines and France shutting the border to UK visitors.

Britain recorded a second consecutiv­e record daily number of new COVID-19 infections at more than 88,000 but the government has so far stopped short of formal limits on socialisin­g as it awaits further evidence of the severity and impact of the new

Omicron variant.

Last year, Christmas celebratio­ns were drasticall­y curtailed after the Alpha variant swept the country. Britons had hoped that this year would be different, but cases have again shot up since the Omicron strain of the virus first emerged.

The UK government last week updated its guidance to advise people to work from home if they can, while mandating they must wear masks in some settings.

But it has stopped short of recommendi­ng the cancelatio­n of social gatherings such as Christmas parties, with embattled Prime Minister Boris Johnson instead recommendi­ng that people get booster vaccines, COVID tests and act cautiously.

Recent days have seen long lines outside vaccinatio­n centers in London and other towns and cities, as people heeded Johnson’s call to get jabbed again.

But at the same time, pubs, theaters and other entertainm­ent venues have reported rising cancelatio­ns – and concerns about their viability – as the case numbers continue to climb.

From the top down, people were changing plans. Queen Elizabeth II, 95, canceled her traditiona­l pre-Christmas family lunch, despite Johnson insisting such gatherings could still go ahead.

It was a similar tale of cancelatio­ns in pubs and restaurant­s. In the run-up to the festive period, England’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty urged people to “prioritize what really matters to them and then cut down on the things that don’t.” “I wouldn’t want to say to people they should do a particular thing,” he told a panel of MPs, insisting the government and its advisers like him were united in their approach. “I think it really should be for people to make those choices.” Johnson has set a highly ambitious target of offering a third vaccine dose to all adults by the end of the month, requiring around a million jabs a day. Health officials have been scaling up their efforts through this week, saying Thursday they had administer­ed nearly 750,000 into arms the previous day. But public health messaging and compliance has been undermined by weeks of controvers­y around claims that Johnson’s staff held Christmas parties last year, despite telling the public to cancel theirs and subjecting much of the country to strict rules on socialisin­g.

In a sign of the scale of

‘Anxiety-provoking’

“We had some cancelatio­ns here,” Patrick Mullighan, 64, owner of the White Hart pub in east London, told AFP.

He said his chef had caught the virus, forcing the kitchen to close.

“It’s like this all the way through the book,” he added, estimating turnover could be down by around a quarter for the normally busy period in the runup to Christmas and New Year.

“It represents a lot of money but... as long as people are still buying drinks, that will be good. I’m always worried but what can we do? You’ve got to carry on.”

Production­s of hit West End musicals are also suffering, with Hamilton and The Lion King announcing further cancelatio­ns due to “ongoing COVID-enforced absences” in the cast and crew.

In a bid to curb the spread of Omicron across the Channel, the French government announced it would ban nonessenti­al travel to and from the UK, for both unvaccinat­ed and fully jabbed non-residents.

The sudden announceme­nt sparked anxiety and even panic among would-be travelers scrambling to cross the Channel in time for Christmas.

“I have friends who are panicking,” London-based Marie Geoffroy, 43, told AFP at St Pancras station as she prepared to board a Eurostar train.

“It’s anxiety-provoking, these last-minute changes, it makes you feel like you’re being held hostage,” she added.

“I know lots of people who have been able to change their tickets because they can, but others can’t afford it.”

‘Prioritize what matters’

discontent with Johnson, around 100 Conservati­ves lawmakers voted earlier against introducin­g vaccine passes for nightclubs and sports venues.

The measures passed anyway with the support of the opposition Labour party.

Industry body the Music Venue Trust said that grassroots music venues are at risk of “permanent closure” after attendance­s dropped by nearly a quarter in the last week.

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