PM Johnson to set out lockdown easing, though pandemic 'not over'
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[July 05, 2021]
By Paul Sandle and Alistair Smout
LONDON (Reuters) -British Prime Minister
Boris Johnson will set out plans on Monday for the final step in easing
England's COVID-19 lockdown, including guidance on social distancing,
face coverings and working from home.
After imposing the most onerous restrictions in Britain's peacetime
history to battle the novel coronavirus, Johnson is preparing to lift
most restrictions in England on July 19, with a final decision due on
July 12.
Data suggests that cases will continue to rise as restrictions are
eased, the government said, but the link to hospital admissions and
deaths has been weakened by a rapid vaccination programme.
Johnson is expected to say that people will learn to live with COVID as
they do already with flu, meaning that hospitalisations, serious illness
and deaths will continue but at a much lower level than before
widespread vaccination.
"As we begin to learn to live with this virus, we must all continue to
carefully manage the risks from COVID and exercise judgement when going
about our lives," Johnson said in a statement released by his office.
"But I must stress that the pandemic is not over."
Britain has suffered the seventh highest global death toll from
COVID-19, and Johnson has been criticised for his decisions over the
timing of each of England's three lockdowns.
But the take-up of vaccines in Britain has been strong, with 86% of
adults receiving a first dose and 64% receiving two doses as of Sunday,
according to government data.
Meanwhile countries such as Australia, where case numbers are lower but
vaccination has been much slower, are tightening restrictions.
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People wear protective masks as they walk through the city centre,
amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in
Manchester, Britain, June 21, 2021. REUTERS/Phil Noble
Cases of COVID-19 have also risen sharply in Britain
in recent weeks, driven by the now-dominant Delta variant, and the
final step of lockdown easing was delayed by four weeks to enable
more people to be vaccinated.
However, Public Health England figures indicate that the vaccines
are highly effective in preventing the Delta variant leading to
severe illness or hospital admission.
Housing minister Robert Jenrick said on Sunday face masks would no
longer be mandatory after the final step in lockdown easing, but
many doctors and scientists urged the government to be more
cautious.
"It makes no sense to stop wearing face masks amongst the public in
closed public settings such as public transport," Chaand Nagpaul,
Chair of the Council of the British Medical Association trade union,
told BBC radio, noting that their primary role was in preventing
transmission.
"As for 'personal choice' - remember that the public face masks do
not protect the wearer predominantly; they protect people around
you."
(Reporting by Paul Sandle and Alistair Smout; editing by Barbara
Lewis and Kevin Liffey)
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