Sunday Mirror

SOCIAL REVELLERS ENJOY NEW FREEDOMS BLISS DANCE

- BY NICOLA SMALL and STEPHEN HAYWARD Scoops@sundaymirr­or.co.uk

REVELLERS toasted the first weekend of freedom in months by downing six million pints of beer yesterday in a sun-soaked splurge of socialisin­g.

Drinkers formed queues outside beer gardens, with many staying on to watch the FA Cup semi-final between Chelsea and Manchester City on jumbo outdoor screens.

High streets were busy too, and Joshua Bamfield, of the Centre for Retail Research, estimated 18.4 million shoppers would spend £1.6billion in stores this weekend.

That is still down on prepandemi­c levels when shoppers spent around £2billion on average.

Not everyone was invited to the party, with around 29,000 pubs shut as they have no outdoor space. And some medics warned that revellers dropping their social distancing guard was “risking all the progress” made in the fight against Covid-19.

But at The Red Lion in Hunningham, Warks, punters were delighted to be back and drank 3,000 beers.

The pub installed 74 outdoor tables during lockdown and there was barely a spare seat yesterday.

Landlord Richard Merand, 37, said: “It’s brilliant to be open again and see people reuniting. We’ve been overwhelme­d by the response. On Monday we sold 1,700 pints, which was amazing – now it’s doubled. We’re also serving around 1,000 meals. It’s just incredible.

“I’ve employed 10 more staff, which means 10 families happy.”

Among those enjoying the day was Robert Huggins, 39, a Network Rail worker from Leek Wootton.

Supping a pint of real ale, he said: “It’s just what the doctor ordered.”

Around 100 miles south in the

capital, Nicola Smith, 36, met five pals for food and cocktails by the Thames.

The events director, of Woolwich, South-East London, said: “The best thing was someone bringing me food and wine for the first time in months. I’ve been fed up of cooking for myself.”

Hours earlier pictures emerged of packed pavements on Friday night.

Some revellers did not appear to be social distancing, and many were apparently ignoring the rule of six.

Dr David Strain, a hospital

February – the highest figure since records began in 2007.

The number of people who have to wait more than 52 weeks to start hospital treatment stood at 387,885 in February – a figure not reached for over a decade.

In February 2020, only 1,613 people faced such a long wait. consultant, told the Sunday Mirror “selfish” socialisin­g could cause infections to surge in about five weeks, just like after the November lockdown.

He said: “We are a long way from being out of this yet and it makes me really angry that selfish behaviour of some people is risking all the progress.

“If they carry on, we will be back where we started. A&Es are going to be in danger of being overrun again and we will be back in lockdown.”

Dr Strain, who works in Exeter,

The crisis is leaving hundreds of thousands of sufferers in serious pain and uncertaint­y.

Jack Braithwait­e, 24, had treatment for testicular cancer in 2019 – but last July a CT scan showed a shadow on his abdomen which has a 60% chance of being cancerous. Jack

Devon, added: “For healthcare workers, who have only just started to catch a breath after months of hell, this is nothing short of sickening.”

Dr Pushpo Hossain, of the Doctors’ Associatio­n UK committee, said the packed pub gardens were “very scary”. She said any new spike could prove too

had two ops cancelled at St James’s University Hospital in Leeds and has now been waiting for more than a year to find out whether the growth is cancerous.

He said: “Right now it’s potentiall­y spreading as I just sit and wait for an appointmen­t.”

The Institute for Public Policy much for medics who have been exhausted by the pandemic and demoralise­d by a paltry pay rise offer. Dr Hossain said: “The Government has broken our morale with the 1% [proposal]. If a third wave hits we won’t be fit enough to deliver a service. We are burnt out.”

Epidemiolo­gist Prof Gabriel Scally,

Research last month warned there will be an extra 4,500 avoidable cancer deaths this year due to Covid disruption­s.

Sara Bainbridge, head of policy at Macmillan Cancer Support, said the new figures show the “catastroph­ic impact of Covid on cancer diagnosis and treatment”.

NEWCASTLE Four pals toast hitting the Toon a member of Independen­t Sage, warned against complacenc­y saying there is “still lots of virus circulatin­g”.

He added: “We need to be reminding ourselves the vaccine is not 100% effective and there an awful lot of people who haven’t their second dose.”

Meanwhile, the delay in reopening indoor services until May 17 – the next milestone in PM Boris Johnson’s roadmap out of lockdown – is said to be costing the hospitalit­y sector more than £1billion a week and faces a legal challenge in the High Court tomorrow.

On the same date friends and family will be able to meet indoors, either as a group of up to six or an unlimited number from two households.

Domestic overnight stays will be allowed with people not in your household and most indoor entertainm­ent will resume.

 ??  ?? LEEDS
Group hug on a girls’ night out
MANCHESTER Two friends share a bottle and a selfie
LEEDS Group hug on a girls’ night out MANCHESTER Two friends share a bottle and a selfie
 ??  ?? LIVERPOOL Revellers dancing in the street
LIVERPOOL Revellers dancing in the street
 ??  ?? LONG WAIT Jack
LONG WAIT Jack

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