UK
eyes tougher COVID-19 restrictions for England as
outbreak spreads
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[September 28, 2020]
LONDON (Reuters) - The British government
is mulling tougher restrictions in England to tackle a swiftly
accelerating second wave of the novel coronavirus outbreak, possibly
outlawing more inter-household socialising, a junior health minister
said on Monday.
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"We don't want to bring on new restrictions but of course we keep a
constant eye on what is going on with the COVID rate," Junior Health
Minister Helen Whately told Sky News. "We were looking at what we
might be able to do."
The Times newspaper said ministers were preparing to enforce a total
social lockdown across much of northern England and potentially
London. The paper said all pubs, restaurants and bars would be
ordered to shut for two weeks.
Asked about The Times report, Whately said the country was at a
really serious point and so COVID-19 had to be brought under
control. She did not give a direct answer on the report that pubs
would be closed.
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"This is the moment when we have an opportunity - we have a choice for the
country - to get this back under control," Whately said. "We have to break these
chains of transmission."
She said pictures from the weekend, after pubs were ordered to close early which
showed crowds of young revellers outside pubs, were "worrying".
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and Bill Schomberg; editing by Michael Holden)
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