From the BBC:
“Covid: New
lockdowns for England and Scotland ahead of 'hardest weeks'”
Everyone in
England must stay at home except for permitted reasons during a new coronavirus
lockdown expected to last until mid-February, the PM says. All schools and
colleges will close to most pupils and switch to remote learning from Tuesday. Boris
Johnson warned the coming weeks would be the "hardest yet" amid
surging cases and patient numbers. He said those in the top four priority
groups would be offered a first vaccine dose by the middle of next month. All
care home residents and their carers, everyone aged 70 and over, all frontline
health and social care workers, and the clinically extremely vulnerable will be
offered one dose of a vaccine by mid-February.
Scotland
earlier issued a stay-at-home order and Wales said schools and colleges would
shut until 18 January for most pupils. Schools in Northern Ireland will have an
"extended period of remote learning", the Stormont Executive said. Speaking
from Downing Street, Mr Johnson told the public to follow the new lockdown
rules immediately, before they become law in the early hours of Wednesday. All
the new measures in England will then last until at least the middle of
February, he said, as a new more infectious variant of the virus spreads across
the UK. The PM added that he believed the country was entering "the last
phase of the struggle". Hospitals were under "more pressure from
Covid than at any time since the start of the pandemic", he said. And he
reiterated the slogan used earlier in the pandemic, urging people to
immediately "stay at home, protect the NHS and save lives".
At-a-glance:
New rules in England
People cannot
leave their homes except for certain reasons, like the first lockdown last
March
These include
essential medical needs, food shopping, exercise and work for those who cannot
do so from home
All schools and
colleges will close to most pupils from Tuesday with remote learning until
February half term
Early years
settings such as nurseries will stay open
End-of-year
exams will not take place this summer as normal
Elsewhere,
university students should not return to campuses and will be taught online
Restaurants can
continue to offer food delivery, but takeaway alcohol will be banned
Outdoor sports
venues - such as golf courses, tennis courts and outside gyms - must close
But outdoor
playgrounds will remain open
Amateur team
sports are not allowed, but elite sport such as Premier League football can
continue
On Monday, the
UK recorded more than 50,000 new confirmed Covid cases for the seventh day in a
row. A further 58,784 cases and an additional 407 deaths within 28 days of a
positive test result were reported, though deaths in Scotland were not
recorded. As of 08:00 GMT, there were 26,626 Covid-19 patients in hospital in
England, according to the latest figures. This is a week-on-week increase of 30%,
and a new record high. Those who are clinically extremely vulnerable will be
contacted by letter and should now shield once more, Mr Johnson said. Support
and childcare bubbles will continue under the new measures - and people can
meet one person from another household for outdoor exercise. Communal worship
and life events like funerals and weddings can continue, subject to limits on
attendance. While Mr Johnson said end-of-year exams would not take place as
normal in the summer, he said alternative arrangements would be announced
separately. The government has published a 22-page document outlining the new
rules in detail. The House of Commons has been recalled to allow MPs to vote on
the new restrictions on Wednesday. Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said his MPs
would "support the package of measures", saying "we've all got
to pull together now to make this work". Once again it is the threat to
the NHS that has forced the hand of ministers. In England there has been a 50%
rise in the number of patients in hospital with Covid since Christmas day. To
put that into context, it equates to 18 hospitals being filled. Currently
around three out of 10 beds are occupied by patients with the disease. In some
hospitals it is more than six in 10. But what is worrying ministers and NHS
leaders is that the number is just going to increase. In the spring it took
nearly three weeks after lockdown for hospital cases to peak. The last six days
have seen in excess of 50,000 new infections confirmed each day across the UK -
a number of these infections are next week's hospital admissions. It is why the
UK's chief medical officers were warning there was a "material risk"
of some hospitals being overwhelmed if something did not change. Mr Johnson
spoke after UK chief medical officers recommended the Covid threat level be
increased to five - its highest level. Level five means the NHS may soon be
unable to handle a further sustained rise in cases, the medical officers said
in a joint statement. NHS Providers, which represents health service trusts,
said hospitals were at a "critical point" and that "immediate
and decisive action" was needed. Announcing tougher measures in Scotland,
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: "It is no exaggeration to say that I
am more concerned about the situation we face now than I have been at any time
since March last year."
For pupils who
returned for their first day of the new term at primary school on Monday, it's
turned out to be an extremely short-lived visit. Boris Johnson's announcement
will see primary, secondary and further education colleges closed for at least
the next six weeks, except for vulnerable and key workers' children. It's a
much bigger shift in policy than had been anticipated, even a few days ago. Even
the return date will depend on the progress in tackling the virus. "I hope
we can steadily move out of lockdown, reopening schools after the February half
term," said the prime minister. Keeping schools open was the government's
most definite of red lines, a few weeks ago they were threatening councils that
wanted to close them - but it's now been overtaken by the spiking lines on the
Covid infection charts. Even after the chaos of last year's replacement grades,
GCSEs and A-levels are being cancelled again - with a replacement system still
to be decided. Vocational exams are to continue. For parents dreading home
schooling, there are plans for it to be better supported this time - with more
computer devices available and suggestions that Ofsted inspectors will check
what schools are offering. But there's no escaping that this will feel like
another sudden and chaotic change of direction for schools and parents. Mr
Johnson's pledge on vaccinations comes after an 82-year-old retired maintenance
manager became the first person in the UK to receive the Oxford-AstraZeneca
Covid-19 jab/ Some 13.9 million people are among the four priority groups who
will receive a vaccine dose by about 15 February, vaccines minister Nadhim
Zahawi said.
^ With the new
and more contagious UK Covid-19 variant it’s not surprising that there would be
much harder lockdowns in the UK. ^
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