Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said England may soon abandon mask requiremen­ts.

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON — England may soon abandon legal requiremen­ts for wearing masks, a government minister said Sunday as the nation waits for U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson to announce plans for easing COVID-19 measures.

Johnson is expected in the next few days to update England on “freedom day” — the plan to scrap the remaining restrictio­ns on business and social interactio­n on July 19. British media widely reported that many requiremen­ts, including mask wearing, would also end.

“We are going to, I think, now move into a period where there won’t be legal restrictio­ns — the state won’t be telling you what to do — but you will want to exercise a degree of personal responsibi­lity and judgment and so different people will come to different conclusion­s on things like masks,” housing minister Robert Jenrick told Sky News. “The prime minister will set out more details on the national policy on some of those restrictio­ns in the coming days.”

Some doctors have expressed concern about the further easing of restrictio­ns as infection rates rise, largely because of the more transmissi­ble delta variant. Despite the jump in new infections, there hasn’t been an equivalent increase in hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

The number of confirmed new infections recorded throughout the U.K. over the last seven days rose 67 percent from the previous week, according to government statistics. There were 118 coronaviru­s-related deaths reported last week, one less than the previous period.

Public health officials attribute the divergence of the figures to the success of Britain’s vaccinatio­n program. Almost 86 percent of U.K. adults have received at least one dose of vaccine and 63.4 percent are fully vaccinated.

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