Daily News

UK mulls fresh restrictio­ns

Mounting fears that hospitals in some parts may be overwhelme­d by Covid- 19 patients

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THE British government is mulling fresh restrictio­ns on everyday life in England amid mounting fears that hospitals in some parts of the country may soon be overwhelme­d by growing numbers of patients laid low by the coronaviru­s.

With the number of people needing to go to the hospital with virus- related conditions rising, and in some areas in the north of England alarmingly so, the pressure on the government to do more is mounting.

“We are currently considerin­g what steps we should take, obviously taking the advice of our scientific and medical advisers, and a decision will be made shortly,” British Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick said yesterday.

“In some parts of the country, the numbers of cases are rising very fast and we are taking that very seriously,” he added.

The hospitalit­y industry in the north of England is widely thought to be the sector most likely to see additional restrictio­ns, potentiall­y involving closures, akin to those announced on Wednesday in Scotland. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon ordered pubs in Scotland’s two biggest cities, Glasgow and Edinburgh, to close and restricted food and drink business in the rest of the country.

As elsewhere in Europe, restrictio­ns have been reimposed in the UK, which has witnessed the continent’s deadliest virus outbreak, with an official death toll of 42 515.

The spike had been widely predicted in the wake of the reopening of the hospitalit­y sector, shops and places of learning.

In many areas of northern England, national measures, such as the closure of pubs and restaurant­s at 10pm, have been augmented by tighter local actions, such as banning contact between households.

However, there is growing evidence to show that those areas that have seen additional restrictio­ns have not experience­d a slowdown in the epidemic. In some areas, the number of new infections is 10 times higher than when the localised restrictio­ns were announced.

Many local leaders are aghast at what they say has been a lack of communicat­ion from the Conservati­ve government over further measures that may be in the offing.

Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, one of the areas suffering the sharpest waves of the virus, said in a tweet: “No discussion. No consultati­on. Millions of lives affected by Whitehall diktat. It is proving impossible to deal with this Government.”

The daily figures provided by the government clearly show the numbers heading in the wrong direction, from new infections through to deaths.

The latest figures on Wednesday showed another 14 162 cases, which is double the amount that was reported the previous week. The number of people being hospitalis­ed increased by 508 and the daily death toll rose by 70.

But behind the national numbers lurk huge regional variations, which has led to calls for more concerted local actions to be taken.

The enforced closure of businesses will undoubtedl­y cause further economic damage to hot spot areas, and unions are demanding that the government accompanie­s any lockdown changes with a financial support package to prevent mass unemployme­nt.

The umbrella Trades Union Congress ( TUC) is urging the government to announce local job retention programmes, whereby it steps in to pay the lion’s share of the salaries of those workers who have been forced to go idle. A national programme that has helped keep a lid on unemployme­nt in the country is due to end at the end of October.

“In areas facing high infection rates and further business closures, the government must act to preserve jobs and stop family firms going to the wall through a new local furlough scheme,” the TUC’S general secretary, Frances O’grady, said.

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