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		UK PM Johnson says optimistic about fully reopening in June
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		 [February 23, 2021] 
		LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime 
		Minister Boris Johnson said on Tuesday that he was very optimistic that 
		all COVID-19 restrictions in England would end on June 21, and added 
		that the government would hold a review into the use of vaccine 
		certificates. 
 Johnson unveiled a map out of lockdown for England on Monday that would 
		keep some businesses shuttered until the summer, saying caution was 
		necessary to ensure there were no reversals on a "one-way road to 
		freedom".
 
 "I'm hopeful, but obviously nothing can be guaranteed ... I'm very 
		optimistic that we'll be able to get there," Johnson told broadcasters 
		when asked about the June 21 date earmarked to end restrictions.
 
 With almost 130,000 fatalities, Britain has suffered the world's 
		fifth-highest official death toll from the pandemic and its economy has 
		seen its biggest crash in more than 300 years.
 
 
		
		 
		But in two months it has already managed to provide an initial vaccine 
		dose to more than a quarter of the population, the fastest rollout of 
		any big country, making it a test case for governments worldwide hoping 
		to return life to normal.
 
 Some in Johnson's Conservative party have questioned whether the 
		timetable for re-opening could have been quicker, given the success thus 
		far of Britain's vaccine rollout.
 
 Earlier, health minister Matt Hancock said safety was the priority.
 
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			Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson holds a coronavirus disease 
			(COVID-19) pandemic media briefing at 10 Downing Street in London, 
			Britain February 22, 2021. Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS 
            
			 
            "We're all absolutely determined to come out of this as fast as 
			safely possible, but no faster," Hancock said on Sky News.
 The roadmap suggests that restrictions on nightclubs and large 
			events will be the last to be lifted on June 21, though the 
			government has stressed that the reopening will be led by data, not 
			dates.
 
 Johnson also said senior minister Michael Gove would lead a review 
			to thrash out the "scientific, moral, philosophical, ethical" 
			question of vaccine certificates for those who have received a 
			coronavirus shot, which could facilitate the re-opening of 
			entertainment and hospitality venues.
 
 "There are deep and complex issues that we need to explore, ethical 
			issues about what the role is for government in mandating all people 
			to have such a thing," he said.
 
 "We can't be discriminatory against people who, for whatever reason, 
			can't have the vaccine. There might be medical reasons why people 
			can't have a vaccine ... some people may genuinely refuse to have 
			one."
 
 (Reporting by Alistair Smout and Michael Holden; Additional 
			reporting by Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Paul Sandle and Alex 
			Richardson)
 
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