The Jerusalem Post

Healthy again, British PM says too risky to relax lockdown yet

- • By GUY FAULCONBRI­DGE and KATE HOLTON

LONDON (Reuters) — Prime Minister Boris Johnson returned to work on Monday after recovering from COVID-19 with a warning that it was still too dangerous to relax a stringent lockdown hammering Britain’s economy for fear of a deadly second outbreak.

Looking healthy again after a life-threatenin­g bout of the coronaviru­s, Johnson compared the disease to an invisible street criminal whom Britons were wrestling to the floor.

“If we can show the same spirit of unity and determinat­ion as we’ve all shown in the past six weeks, then I have absolutely no doubt that we will beat it,” the 55-year-old said outside his Downing Street home a month and a day after testing positive. “I ask you to contain your impatience because I believe we are coming now to the end of the first phase of this conflict, and in spite of all the suffering, we have so nearly succeeded.”

With unemployme­nt soaring, many companies crippled and a recession looming, Johnson said he understood the concerns of business and would consult with opposition parties pressing for clarity on a pathway out of the lockdown.

But with Britain suffering one of the world’s highest death tolls, with 20,732 hospital deaths reported as of Saturday, he stressed it was still a time of maximum risk, and there would be no swift lifting of restrictio­ns.

“We simply cannot spell out now how fast or slow or even when those changes will be made, though clearly the government will be saying much more about this in the coming days,” he said. “We must also recognize the risk of a second spike, the risk of losing control of that virus and letting the reproducti­on rate go back over one, because that would mean not only a new wave of death and disease but also an economic disaster.”

The most stringent lockdown in peacetime has left Britain facing possibly the deepest recession in three centuries and the biggest debt splurge since World War II.

Johnson’s government, party and scientific advisers are divided over how and when the world’s fifth-largest economy should start returning to work, even in limited form.

CRITICISM

The government is next due to review social-distancing measures on May 7. Johnson initially resisted introducin­g the lockdown but then changed course when projection­s showed a 250,000 people could die.

Since the lockdown on March 23, his government has faced criticism from opposition parties and some doctors for initially delaying measures, limited testing capabiliti­es and lack of protective equipment for health workers.

Opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer urged Johnson to set out when and how economic and social restrictio­ns might be eased, as did some Conservati­ve Party donors.

“Simply acting as if this discussion is not happening is not credible,” Starmer wrote in a letter to Johnson.

Perhaps to meet that criticism, Johnson said his government would take the decisions on the lockdown with “maximum possible transparen­cy.”

“I want to share all our working and our thinking, my thinking, with you the British people,” he said.

Latest data on Sunday showed deaths related to COVID-19 in hospitals were up by 413 in the previous 24 hours, the lowest daily rise this month. Some 29,058 tests were done on April 25.

Based on those statistics, the United Kingdom has the fifth-worst death toll in the world, after the United States, Italy, Spain and France.

But the full British toll is much higher, as statistics for deaths outside hospitals, for example, in assisted-care homes, are slower to be published.

However, Stephen Powis, medical director of the National Health Service in England, said the “very definite” downward trend in coronaviru­s cases in hospitals demonstrat­ed that social distancing was reducing transmissi­on and spread of the virus.

 ?? (Simon Dawson/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE WEARING protective masks cross Millennium Bridge in London over the weekend.
(Simon Dawson/Reuters) PEOPLE WEARING protective masks cross Millennium Bridge in London over the weekend.

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