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An inscription in support of Prime Minister Boris Johnson was hung on a street in the British city of Swinerton. PHOTOGRAPHY: Reuters
Boris Johnson is still in intensive care, but has spoken to his fiancé.
More than 30,000 British citizens have already responded to requests from English farmers to join the harvest.
A week ago, they announced a “Feed the Nation” campaign similar to that of World War II, after it became clear that many Bulgarians and Romanians who depend each summer would not come to the UK this year due to the coronavirus epidemic.
Farmers announced that they needed around 90,000 people to start working in late April, and asked unemployed people to join the epidemic because of the epidemic. Following its announcement, recruiting site Totaljobs reported 50,000 farm job searches per week, with vacancies increasing by 83%.
More Brits are projected to head to the farms after the Treasury Department announces that those involved in the harvest will continue to receive 80% of their previous benefits, which are currently suspended quarantine. They will separately take up to £ 350 per week for work. field.
To help with their own production, the British boycotted some imported foods, such as Polish meat and milk, forcing supermarkets to cut them.
Restrictive measures in the UK are expected to continue until May, after 938 people died on Wednesday, more than the largest number of deaths reported per day in Italy. The British government has asked that people stay home this weekend despite the Easter holidays and the expected record warm weather. Police were ordered to stop any attempt to travel to the villas and the coast.
The coronavirus patient, Prime Minister Boris Johnson, is still in intensive care, but his condition has stabilized. It is alleged that he was even able to speak on the phone to his pregnant fiancé, who also had symptoms of the disease and lives in isolation in her inaugural London apartment.
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