Oman Daily Observer

UK ministers under fire for ignoring scientists’ virus advice

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LONDON: The British government faced renewed pressure on Tuesday after indication­s it had ignored scientific advice three weeks ago for tougher restrictio­ns to cut rising coronaviru­s infections.

The main opposition Labour party said the government’s failure to act was alarming and raised questions about the credibilit­y of its latest plan to curb the virus’ spread.

England’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty said he was “not confident” the latest measures announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson could reverse the upward trend.

Johnson had earlier unveiled a three-tiered system categorisi­ng areas of England by rates of infection, to try to simplify a complex web of local restrictio­ns.

The northwest city of Liverpool — the only place put into the highest category — will see a ban on household mixing and pubs closures from Wednesday for at least four weeks.

But Whitty, flanking Johnson at a Downing Street news conference on Monday evening, urged local leaders in the most-affected areas to go further.

“I am not confident, and nor is anybody confident, that the tier three proposals for the highest rates... if we did the absolute base case, and nothing more, would be enough to get on top of it,” Whitty said.

“There’s a lot of flexibilit­y in the tier three level for local authoritie­s... so that they can do significan­tly more than the absolute base because the base will not be sufficient.”

Public health officials had said swathes of northern England should also have been placed at “very high” risk. It then emerged that scientific experts had recommende­d stronger action as long ago as last month, including a so-called circuit-breaker lockdown to cut transmissi­on.

The government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (SAGE) presented ministers with a shortlist of virus interventi­ons on September 21 “for immediate introducti­on”.

They included closing bars, restaurant­s, cafes, gyms and personal services like hairdresse­rs, banning different households from mixing in homes and switching all university and college tuition online.

But Johnson adopted only one of the five recommenda­tions — urging people to work from home.

Johnson has been heavily criticised, not least for being too slow to move to a national lockdown in its early stages.

Britain’s death toll of more than 43,000 is the worst in Europe. Nearly 14,000 new cases were reported across Britain on Monday, with 50 further deaths.

 ?? — AFP ?? Armed police patrol at the scene of a security alert at St Thomas’ Hospital in central London.
— AFP Armed police patrol at the scene of a security alert at St Thomas’ Hospital in central London.

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