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UK PM considering month-long lockdown as Covid-19 cases rise: Reports

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is considering a month-long nationwide lockdown amid the rising number of coronavirus cases in the country, according to reports quoting government sources

Boris Johnson

UK PM Boris Johnson | Photo: Reuters

Press Trust of India London

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is considering a month-long nationwide lockdown amid the rising number of COVID-19 cases in the country, according to reports quoting government sources.

10 Downing Street has scheduled a news conference later on Saturday, when more details on the plans are expected to be laid out by the UK PM, after Cabinet discussions around another lockdown were leaked across sections of the UK media.

Johnson will chair another Cabinet meeting on Saturday to discuss the latest coronavirus strategy further and will then be joined by England's Chief Medical Officer, Chris Whitty, and the government's Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, for the media briefing later.

 

Johnson met his most senior Cabinet colleagues on Friday to discuss the possible toughening of restrictions in light of worsening coronavirus infection rate and hospital cases.

Everything except essential shops and education settings could be closed under the new measures, The Times newspaper reports, with the hope that measures can be lifted in the lead up to Christmas in December.

But no final decisions were believed to have been made and tougher regional measures under the current three-tier localised lockdown measures are also being considered.

UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak, Health Secretary Matt Hancock, Chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove were all understood to be present at the discussion.

Documents seen by the BBC suggest the UK is on course for a much higher death toll than during the first wave unless further restrictions are introduced.

Deaths could reach more than 4,000 a day, one of the models suggests.

This figure is based on no policies being brought in to slow the spread of the disease, but most of the models peak at about 2,000 a day.

At the height of the pandemic earlier in the year, deaths in the UK reached more than 1,000 a day.

Documents from the government's Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M-O) revealed this week that England has breached its "reasonable worst-case" scenario for COVID-19 infections and hospital admissions for the winter months.

The scientists warned that the number of daily coronavirus deaths in England is in line with that scenario, but "is almost certain to exceed this within the next two weeks".

Infection rates are currently soaring across much of Europe, prompting new forms of lockdown across Germany, France and Belgium.

The Opposition Labour Party accused the UK government of dithering over the issue of what has previously been described as a short circuit-breaker complete lockdown.

We could have saved more of the economy and reduced the impact of [lockdown] with a shorter, earlier circuit-breaker that coincided with half term, said Labour's shadow business minister Lucy Powell.

Scientific advisers at the top of government believe it is now too late for a two-week national circuit-breaker to have enough of an effect and a longer national lockdown is needed to drive the reproduction number, or R value, of the virus below one.

The UK's Office for National Statistics (ONS) infection survey found cases "continued to rise steeply" in the week ending October 23, with an estimated 568,100 people in households becoming infected.

It comes as 24,405 new positive cases were confirmed on Friday and a further 274 virus-related deaths reported. So far, the coronavirus has claimed 46,319 lives along with 992,878 confirmed infections in the UK.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Oct 31 2020 | 9:40 PM IST

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