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Coronaviru­s: Boris Johnson orders new lockdown for England

As case numbers continue to climb, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has declared a lockdown for England until mid-February. All nonessenti­al shops will be closed, along with schools and universiti­es.

- Wmr,ipj/nm (Reuters, AFP, AP)

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday announced a new lockdown for England's 56 million residents to combat a fast-spreading new variant of the coronaviru­s.

As part of the measures, which are to last until mid-February, primary and secondary schools will be closed from Wednesday, he said during a televised broadcast. People will only be allowed to leave their homes to shop for essentials, exercise, medical reasons, or to go to work.

University students would not return to their studies — from the Christmas-New Year's break — until the middle of next month.

The UK is at "a critical moment,'' Johnson said, with cases rising rapidly in every part of the country, with "tough, tough'' weeks tocome in thefight against COVID-19.

"As I speak to you tonight, our hospitals are under more pressure from COVID than any time since the start of the pandemic," he added.

"We must therefore go into a national lockdown, which istough enough to contain this variant. That means the government­is once again instructin­g you to stay at home."

Record COVID case numbers

Johnson's declaratio­n followed a call from the UK's chief medical officers to ramp up restrictio­ns to the highest level, as there is a "material risk of the National Health Service in several areas being overwhelme­d over the next 21 days.''

"Cases are rising almost everywhere, in much of the country driven by the new more transmissi­ble variant," said the health chiefs for England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland in a statement released Monday.

The UK has been recording more than 50,000 new coronaviru­s cases daily since December 29. On Monday, a record 58,784 cases were reported across the UK.

New vaccine in use

The lockdown announceme­nt comes as UK health authoritie­s on Monday began administer­ing the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine, with an 82-year-old man receiving the first shot.

With the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine also in its arsenal, the UK is hoping that a nationwide mass-vaccinatio­n program will be enough to slow the virus's spread and allow for life to return to normal by the spring.

"The weeks ahead will be the hardest yet but I really do believe that we're entering the last phase of the struggle," Johnson said.

Scotland also announces lockdown

In Scotland, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon earlier on

Monday imposed a stringent lockdown starting Tuesday and expected to last until the end of January.

Businesses and services will be closed and people will be required to stay at home except for essential reasons to help ease pressure on hospitals and intensive care units, Sturgeon said.

"I am more concerned about the situation we face now than I have been at any time since March last year,'' she added.

 ??  ?? Boris Johnson said the weeks ahead 'will be the hardest yet'
Boris Johnson said the weeks ahead 'will be the hardest yet'

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