England faces a national blockade under UK government plans



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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is considering imposing stringent new nationwide lockdown restrictions just days after health officials warned that half a million people were becoming infected with coronavirus each week.

Johnson is expected to announce the measures for England, which could be introduced on Wednesday and last until Dec. 1, at a press conference on Monday, according to The Times.

Everything except essential stores and educational settings could be closed under the new measures, the newspaper said, but no final decisions are believed to have been made. Tighter regional measures are also being considered.

So far, Johnson has resisted pressure from scientists and political opposition to introduce a “circuit breaker” to curb Covid-19 cases, but faces new calls after new data showed the extent of the cases across England.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) infection survey found that cases “continued to rise sharply” in the week ending October 23, with an estimated 568,100 people in households becoming infected.

Scientific advisers believe that it is now too late for a two-week national circuit breaker to have sufficient effect and a longer national lockdown is needed to bring the virus’s reproduction number, or R-value, below one.

All parts of England are on track to eventually end Tier 3 restrictions, they believe, while deaths could reach 500 a day in a matter of weeks.

Government scientists are also confident that more than 50,000 new cases of Covid-19 occur in England every day.


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An artist creates a mural of an NHS worker on a wall in Manchester.

It comes as official documents released by the UK government showed that a meeting of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) on 8 October said that the number of infections and hospital admissions is “exceeding reasonable levels of planning for the worst of the cases at this time. “

The document, which was released just days before the three-tier restrictions were announced, said the death toll was also “very likely to exceed reasonable worst-case planning levels” in the next two weeks.

Professor Jeremy Farrar, an infectious disease expert and a Sage member, said late Friday that to control the coronavirus “we have to act now.”

He tweeted: “The best time to act was a month ago, but these are very difficult decisions that we would all like to avoid. The second best time is now.”

“The sooner we overcome the disease, reduce transmission, R1, the sooner we can get our society back to normal and the economy back to normal.”

France and Germany announced national closure restrictions earlier this week, while in Northern Ireland pubs and restaurants were closed for four weeks starting October 16, with the exception of take-out and delivery. The schools were closed for two weeks.

Wales is currently under a ‘firewall’ lockdown with leisure, hospitality and tourism businesses closed, and in Scotland most people will be under Tier 3 of a new five-tier system as of Monday.

More than a dozen regions in England will move to Tier 2 restrictions today, including Carlisle, after an announcement was made Friday night.



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