Baltimore Sun Sunday

Johnson voices concern over easing lockdown in England

- By Pan Pylas and Jill Lawless

LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave a strong hint Saturday that the next planned relaxation of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in England this month will be delayed as a result of the spread of the delta variant first identified in India.

In a series of interviews on the sidelines of the Group of Seven leaders’ summit in southwest England, Johnson conceded that he has grown more pessimisti­c about sanctionin­g the next easing scheduled for June 21 as the number of infections across the U.K. has struck levels not seen since February.

While daily infection levels have increased threefold over the past few weeks, they are still way down from the near 70,000 cases recorded in January at the peak of the pandemic’s second wave.

Johnson is set to make an announceme­nt Monday about this month’s timetable, the fourth stage in his government’s four-step unlocking plan for England. He has repeatedly said any unlocking would be dependent on current, but for weeks he had indicated he thought the government would be able to remove all legal limits on social contact this month, including allowing nightclubs to reopen for the first time since the pandemic struck in March 2020.

However, the recent rise in new confirmed cases has led many scientists to call for a delay on what has been dubbed by sections of the British media as “Freedom Day”, potentiall­y of up to four weeks, so more people can get vaccinated before the restrictio­ns are lifted.

“It’s clear that the Indian variant is more transmissi­ble,

and it’s also true that the cases are going up, and that the levels of hospitaliz­ation are going up,” Johnson said on Sky News. “Now, we don’t know exactly to what extent that is going to feed through into extra mortality, but clearly it’s a matter of serious, serious concern.”

Asked whether he was less optimistic now than he was at the end of May, he replied: “Yes, that’s certainly fair.”

The U.K. has recorded nearly 128,000 coronaviru­s-related deaths, more than any other nation in Europe. After the devastatin­g winter surge, COVID-19 deaths fell sharply recently following a strict monthslong lockdown and the rapid rollout of vaccines.

The improved backdrop has allowed lockdown restrictio­ns to be eased in the U.K. over the past couple of months, with most sectors of the economy and society operating within social distancing guidelines. The four nations of the U.K. have lifted restrictio­ns at different paces but have generally pursued similar plans.

Supporters of a pause, which includes the British Medical Associatio­n, say it would make the vaccine rollout

more effective by allowing more younger people to get their first shot and older people to receive their second, which evidence shows helps contain the delta variant.

Dr. Chaand Nagpaul, the chair of the British Medical Associatio­n council, said “there is a huge risk that prematurel­y relaxing all restrictio­ns will undo the excellent work” of the country’s vaccinatio­n program and further fuel infections.

The vaccine rollout, which has primarily been based on age, was extended to 25- to 29-year-olds last week. The government has said it wants every adult to have received at least one dose by the end of July. Around 62% of the British population has had one shot so far, while about 44% has had two.

Government figures reported Saturday showed 7,738 new daily cases, down from the previous day’s 8,125 — the highest one-day figure since Feb. 26.

The delta variant, considered at least 40% more transmissi­ble than the previous dominant strain, accounts for more than 90% of all new confirmed U.K. infections.

 ?? LEON NEAL/GETTY-AFP ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is not optimistic about England easing coronaviru­s restrictio­ns this month. A variant is causing a spike in cases.
LEON NEAL/GETTY-AFP British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is not optimistic about England easing coronaviru­s restrictio­ns this month. A variant is causing a spike in cases.

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