UK PM Johnson to impose tougher COVID-19 curbs shortly
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[January 04, 2021]
By Kate Holton
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister
Boris Johnson said on Monday he would impose tougher restrictions on
England shortly to contain a rapidly escalating coronavirus outbreak and
indicated that secondary schools may not reopen this month.
Cases of COVID-19 have risen sharply in Britain in recent weeks, fuelled
by a new and more transmissible variant of the virus. On Sunday there
were nearly 55,000 new cases and in total more than 75,000 people in the
country have died with COVID-19 during the pandemic - the second highest
toll in Europe.
Visiting a hospital to see the first people receive the vaccine made by
Oxford University and AstraZeneca, Johnson said the country faced
"tough, tough" weeks to come.
"If you look at the numbers, there's no question that we're going to
have to take tougher measures and we'll be announcing those in due
course," Johnson said. "We've got the virus really surging."
England is currently divided into four tiers of restrictions, depending
on the prevalence of the virus, with the vast majority of the country in
Tiers 3 and 4 where social mixing is restricted and restaurants and pubs
are closed.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock said earlier that the rules in Tier 3 were
clearly not working. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have their own
tough restrictions.
With England moving back towards the strict lockdown of the first wave
in March, Johnson was also asked if schools would have to close once
again and return to online learning.
He said that would remain a last resort for primary schools given the
social and educational damage that can be done to isolated children.
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Britain's Health Secretary Matt Hancock arrives at Downing Street,
in London, Britain, January 4, 2021. REUTERS/John Sibley
But he indicated they may need to rethink a plan to reopen secondary
schools for pupils aged between 11 and 18.
"It looks as though secondary schools probably play more of a role
in the spread of the epidemic than primary schools, so we'll have to
look very hard at what we do with secondary schools later in the
month," he said.
The government has spent the year trying to balance the need to shut
down the country to contain the virus without hammering the economy.
The first national coronavirus lockdown in May last year prompted a
25% drop in economic output - unprecedented in modern records -
leaving Britain's economy harder hit by the pandemic than most
others.
While the economy recovered partially in the third quarter, renewed
lockdown measures threaten to cause a double-dip recession at the
start of 2021.
(Reporting by Kate Holton, Andy Bruce and Guy Faulconbridge, editing
by Sarah Young)
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