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After ‘warning light’, British PM halts COVID lockdown unwind – Metro US

After ‘warning light’, British PM halts COVID lockdown unwind

Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks to local people at
Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks to local people at the Canal Side Heritage Centre in Beeston

LONDON (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Friday postponed a planned easing of the coronavirus lockdown in England after a rise in infections amplified fears of a second deadly COVID-19 surge.

Just hours after Britain imposed tougher measures on swathes of northern England, Johnson announced that casinos, bowling alleys and skating rinks would remain shut while wedding receptions would have to be cancelled.

“We’re now seeing a warning light on the dashboard,” Johnson told reporters at an online news conference from Downing Street when asked about a second surge in the virus which has killed more than 55,000 people in the United Kingdom.

“Our assessment is that we should now squeeze that brake pedal in order to keep the virus under control.”

The abrupt halt to the unwind and the imposition of stricter restrictions on more than 4 million people were the biggest reversal to date in Britain’s path out of lockdown.

‘NEAR THE LIMITS’

As the world grapples with the grim realisation that it could be facing a second wave, Johnson said the virus was gathering pace in Asia and Latin America while continental Europe was struggling to keep it under control.

The virus, which first emerged in China, has already killed at least 670,000 people and shunted swathes of the global economy towards collapse.

UK scientists are no longer confident that the reproduction number of the coronavirus in England is below 1, the government said on Friday, while a survey showed infections were on the rise for the first time since May.

England’s Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty, speaking alongside Johnson, said the government had probably reached the limits of reopening the economy and society without creating a rising number of infections.

“We all know that what we have to try and do is to get to the absolute edge of what we can do in terms of opening up society and the economy without getting to the point where the virus starts to take off again,” he said.

“We have probably reached near the limits, or the limits, of what we can do in terms of opening up society.”

(Writing by Guy Faulconbridge and Kate Holton; Additional reporting by Andy MacAskill; Editing by Nick Macfie and Andrew Cawthorne)