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Concern is growing in the UK as the government announces “more restrictive measures” ready to go into effect. In France, new infections are declining but more than 10,000 remain in one day
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the UK is facing the second wave of Covid-19 this week and has outlined new restrictions for residents of the hardest hit North, North West and Central regions of England. Among these measures, the UK government is introducing a statutory self-isolation obligation, starting on September 28, for people who test positive or are called upon to do so by the National Health Service (NHS). “The best way to combat the virus is for everyone to follow the rules and for people at risk of transmitting the disease to isolate themselves,” the prime minister said in a statement.
The patrols begin in Madrid The situation in Spain is also worrying. In Madrid, the municipality has deployed more than 200 police officers to carry out dozens of random controls in the week in which local closures will be activated in six districts of the capital. The measure will affect more than 800 thousand people throughout the region, the most affected in the country.
The plan will revolve around four axes: patrols, information campaign in the first two days, and later the possibility of imposing fines (from 600 euros), quarantine controls and reinforcements to the police in crowded areas. The health ministry reported that at least 1,500 people throughout the region have not complied with security protocols in the last three days.
Coronavirus, cases in decline in France but more than 10 thousand remain in one day In France, there have been 10,569 new cases of coronavirus in the last 24 hours, a sharp decline from Saturday, when there were 2,929 more. The test’s positivity rate continues to rise, standing at 5.7%, down from 5.6% yesterday. Le Parisien informs him. The number of deaths is also growing: today there were 311.
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