Britain touts 'tiered' approach to COVID as neighbours prepare near
lockdowns
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[October 30, 2020]
By Alistair Smout and Paul Sandle
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's "tiered"
approach to reining in the coronavirus appears to be working, the
foreign minister said on Friday, as EU neighbours France and Germany
prepared new controls on gatherings almost as strict as their original
spring lockdowns.
Europe and the United States have emerged as the current danger zones
for COVID-19, which was first identified in China in December, in a
global crisis in which more than 44.94 million people have been infected
and 1,178,943 have died.
British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the localised approach could
work if everyone stuck to the rules.
Britain has recorded more than 20,000 new cases a day on average over
the last week, and an average of more than 200 deaths a day in the same
timeframe.
Asked whether a national lockdown was now inevitable, Raab said: "No, I
don't think that is right, but what we are guided by is the rate of the
virus.
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"We've seen some evidence since we started putting in place this tiered
approach that the rate of increase has slowed," Raab told BBC TV.
The government has adopted a three-tiered system of curbs for local
areas, though the opposition Labour Party has called for a temporary
lockdown to break chains of infection.
France and Germany announced new lockdowns this week as infections on
the continent passed the 10-million milestone and hospitals and
intensive care units filled up again with patients.
Bars, restaurants, sports and cultural events have been restricted or
closed in several other European countries.
Belgium, one of Europe's worst affected countries, recorded an average
of 15,316 new infections per day in mid-October, health officials said,
hours before the government was due to consider a lockdown. Austria
recorded its highest daily number of infections to date.
Italian Economy Minister Roberto Gualtieri said on Friday it was the
government's "absolute priority" to avoid a national lockdown but EU
Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides said EU countries should be ready
to impose further restrictions.
"We need to pull through this, where needed, with restrictions on
everyday life to break the chain of transmission," she told a video
conference of EU health ministers, according to her speaking notes.
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Healthcare workers wearing powered air purifying respirator
(PAPR) hoods process COVID-19 test samples at a drive-thru
testing site operated by Avera Health inside the former
Silverstar Car Wash, as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreak continues in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, U.S.,
October 28, 2020. REUTERS/Bing Guan
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'UNRELENTING SURGE' IN U.S.
Gloom over the rising infections his financial markets again. World
stocks fell and oil headed for a double-digit weekly slide on
Friday.
Illustrating the difficulty is reining in the virus without
destroying the economy, Britain's "eat out to help out" discount
scheme to boost spending at restaurants, cafes and pubs over the
summer helped spread the coronavirus, according to a new study.
In the United States, the White House coronavirus task force warned
that much of the country was in the grips of an "unrelenting" surge
in COVID-19 cases as the number of infections reported on Thursday
hit a new daily record of more than 91,000.
The hardest-hit regions in the West and Midwest encompass a number
of battleground states expected to play a pivotal role in Tuesday's
U.S. presidential election contest between Republican incumbent
Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden.
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"We're going in the wrong direction," said Dr. Anthony Fauci, a
leading task force member and director of the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Trump has downplayed the virus since the pandemic began, ridiculing
Fauci and mocking social distancing and the wearing of masks. He has
repeatedly told campaign rallies the country is "turning the corner"
on the pandemic to the delight of his mostly non-mask wearing
supporters but infuriating his opponents.
Russia has also seen coronavirus cases swell in recent weeks.
Authorities reported 18,283 new infections on Friday, the highest
tally recorded since the pandemic began, and 355 deaths.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Nick Macfie; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez and Chizu Nomiyama)
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