The Jerusalem Post

UK PM Johnson reverses plan to skip quarantine

- • By WIllIam James

london (reuters) – British prime minister Boris johnson and finance minister rishi sunak will both self-isolate in line with national guidance, abandoning heavily criticized plans to take part in a pilot scheme that would have allowed them to continue working.

the u-turn comes a day after health minister sajid javid said he had tested positive for CoVId-19 and at a time when the government’s coronaviru­s response is under intense scrutiny.

almost all remaining restrictio­ns in england will be lifted on monday despite a surge in infections as ministers put their faith in the advanced vaccine program.

Cases are rising by more than 50,000 a day and hundreds of thousands of Britons are being asked to self isolate for 10 days, causing havoc for employers and parents, prompting train cancellati­ons and forcing some businesses to close their doors.

the government announced at 7 a.m. that johnson and sunak had been exposed to a person with CoVId-19 and would take part in a trial scheme that allowed them to keep working instead of self-isolating. But less than three hours later that decision had been reversed after a flurry of criticism from voters, political opponents and business owners.

“he will not be taking part in the testing pilot,” a spokesman said. “he will continue to conduct meetings with ministers remotely.” johnson will isolate at Chequers.

opposition politician­s had said it was hypocritic­al for johnson and sunak to exempt themselves from some of the rules.

“Boris johnson and rishi sunak have been busted yet again for thinking the rules that we are all following don’t apply to them,” said labour party leader Keir starmer.

“the way the prime minister conducts himself creates chaos, makes for bad government and has deadly consequenc­es for the British public.”

sunak acknowledg­ed the backlash over their decision.

“I recognize that even the sense that the rules aren’t the same for everyone is wrong,” he said on twitter.

the government’s handling of the pandemic has been dogged with episodes that have damaged public trust – most recently when then-health minister matt hancock was pictured kissing an adviser, in breach of social distancing regulation­s. he later resigned.

housing minister robert jenrick confirmed that the government would go ahead with its ‘freedom day’ plan on monday, removing the requiremen­t to wear face masks, lifting limits on social gatherings and allowing high-risk businesses to reopen.

ministers argue that the vaccinatio­n program, under which 87.8% of the adult population has had one vaccine and 67.8% have been double vaccinated, has largely broken the link between cases and mortality.

“the last time we had cases at the level we do today, the number of people dying from the virus was 30 times the number it is today,” jenrick said.

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