Bangkok Post

UK warns normalcy far away

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LONDON: Life in locked-down Britain may not return to normal for six months or longer as it battles the coronaviru­s outbreak, a top health official warned on Sunday, as the death toll reached passed 1,200.

Deputy chief medical officer Jenny Harries said it would take two or three weeks to assess the impact of the current rules for people to stay at home to limit the spread of Covid-19.

“If we are successful, we will have squashed the top of that (infection) curve, which is brilliant,” she told the government’s daily news conference.

“But we must not then suddenly revert to our normal way of living — that would be quite dangerous. If we stop then, all of our efforts would be wasted and we could potentiall­y see a second peak.”

She said measures to contain the virus would be reviewed every three weeks, “probably over the next six months” or even longer — but stressed that did not necessaril­y mean a full lockdown for that long.

“Gradually we will be able to hopefully adjust some of the social distancing measures and gradually get us all back to normal,” Ms Harries said.

Britain has been on lockdown for a week, with non-essential shops and services closed and people told to stay at home except for daily exercise, to get groceries or help vulnerable people.

The measure was introduced amid fears the virus was spreading more rapidly than expected.

New figures on Sunday revealed that 1,228 people with coronaviru­s have now died in Britain — an increase of 209 on the previous 24 hours.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is among more than 19,500 people who have tested positive for Covid-19.

He is currently holed up in his flat above his Downing Street office, but officials say he has mild symptoms and remains “fully in charge”.

Professor Neil Ferguson of Imperial College London, one of the epidemiolo­gists advising the government, told the Sunday Times he believed the lockdown could last until “the end of May, maybe even early June”.

In a video posted on his Twitter account, Mr Johnson thanked health workers, pharmacist­s and shop workers still working during the shutdown — and the 20,000 doctors and nurses who had returned to work during the crisis.

 ?? AFP ?? Britain’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock, second left in the front row, stands at the dispatch box while speaking during a virus debate in London last week.
AFP Britain’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock, second left in the front row, stands at the dispatch box while speaking during a virus debate in London last week.

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