Yorkshire Post

JAYNE DOWLE: FREEDOM RINGS HOLLOW AS GOVERNMENT LOSES TRUST

- Jayne Dowle

Estimates suggest that within a couple of weeks there could be two or three million perfectly healthy people indoors sitting out the mandatory 10-day quarantine still required.

TODAY IS supposed to be Freedom Day, when we cast off the shackles of the last 18 months and step forward confidentl­y into the world once more. Let’s see what happens, shall we? If you were planning on going on holiday this week, or even back to the office, don’t pack your suitcase or lunchbox just yet. Especially if you still have the NHS Track and Trace app on your phone.

Thousands have deleted it, and not out of bloody-mindedness, but common sense. This is something the Prime Minister is always telling us to use. For this hypocritic­al government fiasco – and we haven’t forgotten about you in that lift, Matt Hancock – to reach a new crescendo just as Freedom Day dawns is particular­ly ironic.

Chief medical officer Chris Whitty warns that the UK is not “out of the woods yet” and we should all approach the end of most restrictio­ns today with great caution. The number of people in hospital with Covid-19 is doubling around every three weeks and could hit “quite scary numbers” if the trend is sustained, he says.

Meanwhile, we’re hearing worse could be to come, with the possibilit­y of an autumn flu explosion which may trigger another potential national lockdown. That would be a first, at least. Until the coronaviru­s pandemic tens of thousands of people in the UK died of flu and pneumonia every year and government­s hardly blinked. I remember two devastatin­g flu epidemics in the 1990s, when people I knew lost their lives and workplaces were decimated for weeks.

Back then, however, we kept calm and carried on. I know, I know, apart from the fact that it is hugely contagious, coronaviru­s is not influenza. It’s also a global threat. Millions have died. And it’s still mutating. I think we have all realised it’s deadly serious by now, since our lives have been controlled for 18 months by increasing­ly bizarre government measures which now seem to have totally lost all sense of logic and pragmatism.

On the one hand the Prime Minister is pressing ahead with scrapping social distancing, including removing the compunctio­n to wear face-masks in public places, unless – it seems – an individual organisati­on deems it so. If this isn’t a recipe for confusion and yet more aggravatio­n I don’t know what is.

A spokeswoma­n for the Co-op, which like many supermarke­ts will support continued use of masks, says they’re not going to actually enforce the policy, highlighti­ng the fear that a strict approach could quickly escalate to a “flashpoint for violence and abuse” towards staff. And on the other hand, we face more threats to our freedom than ever. According to the latest figures available, 520,000 people were told to quarantine last week after receiving a NHS Test and Trace alert on their mobile phone.

As a result, whole industries are grinding to halt. At the Nissan factory in Sunderland, hailed as a beacon of the new post-Brexit Great Britain just a couple of weeks ago after a £1bn investment, at least 900 employees have been ‘pinged’ and are now stuck at home. Supermarke­ts and logistics companies are warning that staff shortages could decimate the food distributi­on chain.

Estimates suggest that within a couple of weeks there could be two or three million perfectly-healthy people indoors sitting out the mandatory 10day quarantine still required if you are found to have come in contact with a Covid-positive individual. Or not. When I was in town last Thursday afternoon I saw countless families out shopping, mostly mothers with schoolage children. Women, as we know, have borne the brunt of the social effects of this pandemic, giving up jobs because it’s simply unfeasible to carry on when daily routines are disrupted at the ping of a phone or a change in government mood.

School quarantine­s became an absolute joke. Also, I know lots of parents who took their own decision to withdraw their kids for the last couple of weeks of term, because they were fed up of the whole debacle and didn’t want their family to end up in enforced quarantine, especially if a holiday was booked.

Frankly, we’ve all had enough. You can’t double-jab more than 33 million over-18s, or 66 per cent of the UK adult population, and expect them all to sit quietly at home with no symptoms whilst hundreds of thousands of people descend on Silverston­e for a weekend of Grand Prix motor racing.

The fact is, the Government lost most of us somewhere around March, when the highly-successful vaccine roll-out began to gather pace. ‘Freedom Day’ and at the same time, a highly-restrictiv­e and seemingly illogical £37bn contacttra­cing system condemning millions of people to house arrest is an absolutely toxic combinatio­n. Scrap Test and Trace, I say. It was never fit for purpose and it is now causing more harm than good. And promise, from today, to be honest with us. That alone would mean so much more than any false promises of ‘freedom’.

 ?? PICTURE: DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/GETTY IMAGES ?? MUDDLED: Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s mixed messaging over social distancing and mask-wearing is a recipe for confusion, says Jayne Dowle.
PICTURE: DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/GETTY IMAGES MUDDLED: Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s mixed messaging over social distancing and mask-wearing is a recipe for confusion, says Jayne Dowle.
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