Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Wales gets English cops’ backing

Bordering area to help enforce tougher policy

- By Danica Kirka

GLOUCESTER, England — A police force in England will try to stop people from leaving Wales, which has started a 17-day lockdown to slow a surging rate of coronaviru­s infections.

The Gloucester­shire Constabula­ry will patrol routes from Wales and pull over drivers it believes are making long journeys. Travelers without a good excuse will be asked to turn around. If they don’t comply, officers will inform their Welsh counterpar­ts so they can take action because Gloucester­shire police don’t have the authority to fine people traveling from Wales, the department said.

The situation illustrate­s the patchwork of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns imposed by authoritie­s throughout the U.K., which has Europe’s deadliest coronaviru­s numbers, with 44,661 confirmed virus deaths. Some 1,756 of those occurred in Wales, which has a population of about 3 million.

Under the U.K.’s system of devolved authority, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland have establishe­d their own public health rules. Meanwhile, the national government in Westminste­r has created a three-tiered virus alert system that applies to England alone.

On Saturday, South Yorkshire became the latest region to enter Tier 3, the tightest level of virus risk restrictio­ns in England, following Liverpool, Greater Manchester and Lancashire.

But it is the Welsh government that has imposed one of the U.K.’s strictest lockdowns, including a ban on nonessenti­al travel. Under rules that took effect Friday evening, Wales also closed most businesses and restricted high schools to online instructio­n.

Another English police force,

West Mercia, also said it will work with Welsh counterpar­ts to “enforce, where necessary, the relevant rules for the area we serve.”

The number of new infections is continuing to rise across Britain. Professor Neil Ferguson, whose modeling led to the U.K.’s original lockdown in March, told the BBC that the current situation is “worrying.”

“We are in a critical time right now,” he said. “The health system will not be able to cope with this rate of growth for much longer.”

 ?? Ben Birchall The Associated Press ?? A sign on a road gives informatio­n Friday to motorists going to Wales. An English police force will try to stop people from leaving Wales, which is in a 17-day lockdown.
Ben Birchall The Associated Press A sign on a road gives informatio­n Friday to motorists going to Wales. An English police force will try to stop people from leaving Wales, which is in a 17-day lockdown.

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