Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Shut UK nightclubs worry about not seeing light of day

It won’t go back exactly the way it was but I think people will still want to come together, eat together, pray together (and) dance together

- AFP,

LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) — Inside a former London newspaper printing factory turned nightclub, a roaming urban fox has replaced throngs of dancers shut out by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Six months after COVID-19 turned off the music and lights at London’s Printworks and similar dance venues across Britain, there is no knowing when they will reopen.

The UK government on Friday warned that a second nationwide lockdown could be imminent as virus cases surge once more.

Britain has been the worst-hit country in Europe by the pandemic, with nearly 42,000 deaths from the virus.

Numbers of new cases are meanwhile reaching levels not seen since April, with some attributed to illegal raves.

“We’re fighting for our survival,” Printworks’ co-founder Simeon Aldred told

AFP, from the nightclub that just a few months ago welcomed up to 5,000 clubbers an evening.

‘Burning cash’

Aldred is unsure whether he and business partner Bradley Thompson will have to let go 400 staff working across all their venues or plan for reopenings, possibly early next year.

“We’ve been burning our own (cash) resources,” he said, while deploring what he sees as a lack of government visibility.

“It won’t go back exactly the way it was but I think people will still want to come together, eat together, pray together (and) dance together.”

Peter Marks, the chief executive of Deltic, one of Britain’s largest nightclub groups with 53 venues, fears bankruptcy.

“We’ve come from a very successful healthy company to one brought to its knees,” he told noting the closures are still costing it millions of pounds in rent and other fixed costs.

This is despite government support with paying staff wages and thanks to tax cuts during the pandemic.

According to the Night Time Industries Associatio­n, UK nightclubs together with bars, pubs, restaurant­s and theaters generate £66 billion (71 billion euros, $84 billion) annually and employ about 1.3 million people.

While the British government has been paying the bulk of wages for millions of workers during the pandemic, its furlough scheme is set to end in October, with analysts forecastin­g a surge in unemployme­nt as a result.

“We know this is an incredibly difficult time for nightclubs, but they will need to remain closed for now in line with current scientific advice to control the virus,” said a government statement.

“We continue to engage with industry representa­tives and listen to their concerns.”

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