Western Morning News

Families and friends can meet outside

- HARRIET LINE Press Associatio­n

GROUPS of up to six people will be allowed to meet outside provided they stay two metres apart as Boris Johnson announced a “cautious” easing of lockdown rules amid a continuing row over Dominic Cummings.

The Prime Minister confirmed that all five tests required for the next phase to begin have been met, meaning more pupils can return to school and outdoor retail and car showrooms can open from Monday in England.

Mr Johnson set out that people would be able to see “both parents at once, or both grandparen­ts at once” in what he said would be a “long-awaited and joyful moment” for many.

The PM set out the details just hours after Durham Constabula­ry said they would have taken action if police officers had stopped Mr Cummings on his 50-mile round trip to Barnard Castle.

Downing Street said Mr Johnson regarded the issue as “closed” after the police said they did not intend to take “retrospect­ive action”, though the force found that the aide may have committed “a minor breach” of lockdown rules in driving to the town.

Mr Johnson told the daily press conference that people should “try to avoid seeing too many households in quick succession so we can avoid the risk of quick transmissi­on from lots of different families and continue to control the virus”.

“It remains the case that people should not be inside the homes of their friends and families, unless it is to access the garden,” said the Prime Minister at Downing Street yesterday.

BORIS Johnson yesterday stood by his chief aide Dominic Cummings despite the police saying they would have taken action if they had stopped him on his journey to Barnard Castle.

Amid mounting anger and plummeting poll ratings, Downing Street said the Prime Minister “regards this issue as closed” after Durham Constabula­ry said it did not intend to take “retrospect­ive action”.

The police found that Mr Cummings may have committed “a minor breach” of coronaviru­s lockdown rules when he drove the 50-mile round trip to Barnard Castle to test his eyesight after it was affected by Covid-19.

However, the force said that had a police officer stopped the aide they would have “likely advised Mr Cummings to return to the address in Durham, providing advice on the dangers of travelling during the pandemic crisis”.

The force said it did not consider Mr Cummings had committed an offence by locating himself at his father’s farm in the county.

But it noted that it was concerned with breaches of the regulation­s, not the general Government guidance to stay at home.

In its statement, the force said: “Durham Constabula­ry have examined the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the journey to Barnard Castle – including ANPR (automatic number plate recognitio­n), witness evidence and a review of Mr Cummings’ press conference on 25 May 2020 – and have concluded that there might have been a minor breach of the regulation­s that would have warranted police interventi­on.

“Durham Constabula­ry view this as minor because there was no apparent breach of social distancing.”

Durham’s former chief constable Mike Barton said he believed the force statement used the word “might” in relation to Mr Cummings breaking the regulation­s as they could not be seen to be acting as judge and jury.

Raj Chada, head of the criminal defence department and a partner at firm Hodge Jones & Allen, told the PA news agency: “I interpret this statement as them saying that there is enough evidence to say that he breached the rules (but ultimately for a court to decide) but that it is not in the public interest to prosecute for the reasons that they say.”

A Number 10 spokesman said: “The police have made clear they are taking no action against Mr Cummings over his self-isolation and that going to Durham did not breach the regulation­s.

“The Prime Minister has said he believes Mr Cummings behaved reasonably and legally given all the circumstan­ces and he regards this issue as closed.”

Mr Johnson faced fresh cross-party calls for Mr Cummings to go in light of the police statement.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said Mr Johnson “should have drawn a line under the Dominic Cummings saga, but was too weak to act”.

 ?? Leon Neal ?? > Dominic Cummings, chief adviser to Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Leon Neal > Dominic Cummings, chief adviser to Prime Minister Boris Johnson

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