Northern
Ireland to shut restaurants and suspend school in
strictest UK lockdown
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[October 14, 2020]
By Amanda Ferguson
BELFAST (Reuters) - Northern Ireland is to
impose the strictest COVID-19 restrictions seen in the United Kingdom
since early summer, closing schools for two weeks and shuttering
restaurants for four, First Minister Arlene Foster said on Wednesday.
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The British-ruled region has become one of Europe's biggest COVID-19
hotspots in recent weeks. Its health minister described the
situation last Friday as becoming more grave by the hour.
"We do not take this step lightly ... the COVID transmission rates
must be turned down or we will be in a very difficult place very
soon indeed," Foster told the regional parliament after announcing
the measures.
"We are very determined that this will be a time-limited
intervention. They will not continue beyond the four weeks."
The closure will affect the entire hospitality sector, with the
exception of takeaway and delivery services, and double the length
of the annual October school break from one week to two.
Under the measures, retail will remain open, but "close contact
services" such as hairdressers and beauticians will be closed.
People will be advised to avoid all unnecessary travel and work from
home, while universities will be asked to teach remotely as far as
possible.
The United Kingdom as a whole has been reporting record numbers of
daily infections, and the highest number of deaths since early
summer.
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Prime Minister Boris Johnson introduced a new tiered system of restrictions for
England on Monday, with Liverpool and the surrounding Merseyside region placed
in the highest level.
The government of the Irish Republic will consider whether to respond to the new
measures and impose additional restrictions in areas close to the open Northern
Ireland border where infection levels are also very high, Prime Minister Leo
Varadkar said earlier on Wednesday.
Ireland has had stricter restrictions in place since last week, with all indoor
restaurant dining and non-essential travel banned, but Varadkar said more
measures may be needed.
Northern Ireland's health department reported 863 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday
and seven more deaths, meaning it has had 334 cases per 100,000 people in the
past seven days.
(Reporting by Amanda Ferguson; additional reporting and writing by Conor
Humphries; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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