Selasa, 03 Agustus 2021

COVID-19: Scotland will lift most remaining legal coronavirus restrictions next week, Nicola Sturgeon confirms - Sky News

Nicola Sturgeon has confirmed that Scotland will lift most of its remaining coronavirus restrictions next Monday.

Scotland's first minister said the move on 9 August will see nightclubs reopen, sports stadia and concert venues welcoming full capacity crowds, and social distancing coming to an end.

Ms Sturgeon has already confirmed face coverings in shops and on public transport will remain mandatory for "some time to come".

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Nicola Sturgeon holds coronavirus briefing
Image: Nicola Sturgeon says Scotland will lift most restrictions on 9 August

Every part of Scotland moved to Level 0 last month, which meant more people could gather in groups and the opening hours of hospitality businesses could be extended.

The announcement comes after Ms Sturgeon's Cabinet considered the latest coronavirus data on Tuesday morning.

The Scottish Parliament was virtually recalled from its summer recess to hear the result of these discussions.

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"The move beyond Level 0 will entail the lifting of most of the remaining legally enforced restrictions, most notably on physical distancing and limits to the size of social gatherings," Ms Sturgeon said.

"It also means that from 9 August no venues will be legally required to close.

"This change is significant and hard-earned. The sacrifices everyone has made over the past year-and-a-half can never be overstated."

People enjoy their time at a nightclub, as part of a national research programme assessing the risk of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) transmission, in Liverpool, Britain April 30, 2021. REUTERS/Carl Recine
Image: Nightclubs in Scotland will be able to reopen on 9 August

But Ms Sturgeon urged people not to drop their guard, warning that "care and caution will still be required".

She added: "While this move will restore a substantial degree of normality, it is important to be clear that it does not signal the end of the pandemic or a return to life exactly as we knew it before COVID struck.

"Declaring freedom from, or victory over, this virus is premature. The harm the virus can do, including through the impact of long COVID, should not be underestimated. And its ability to mutate may yet pose us real challenges."

Ms Sturgeon said that some protections and guidance will remain in place, including:

• The wearing of masks to be mandated "for some time to come"

• Test and Protect to continue

• Hybrid of home working and office working to be advised

• Continued consideration of vaccine passports for some events

• Face masks still to be worn by secondary school pupils and staff for up to six weeks

On home working, Ms Sturgeon said: "I know most businesses are not planning a wholesale return to the office, while recognising that a return for some staff will be beneficial to them and their employers. It is vital that this gradual approach continues.

"We will also encourage employers to consider for the longer term, as the Scottish Government is doing, a hybrid model of home and office working - which may, of course, have benefits beyond the need to control a virus."

S5 and S6 students during an English Literature class at St Andrew's RC Secondary School in Glasgow as more pupils are returning to school in Scotland in the latest phase of lockdown easing. Picture date: Monday March 15, 2021.
Image: Nicola Sturgeon says secondary school pupils will still be required to wear face masks in school buildings

On vaccine passports, Scotland's first minister added: "I can assure Parliament that we do not underestimate the ethical, equity and human rights issues associated with COVID-status certification and will keep members updated and consulted on our thinking on this issue."

And on keeping the rule that secondary pupils must wear face masks while inside school buildings, she said: "I am acutely aware that many young people find this difficult - and it will be kept under review - but for now, we consider this an important protection for them, and for others in the school."

Analysis by James Matthews, Scotland correspondent

Few would argue with Nicola Sturgeon’s characterisation of next Monday, the change it brings and progress back to normality.

Normality with a face mask on, at least.

In a remote sitting of the Scottish Parliament, the First Minister’s virtual performance was Festival Edinburgh’s hottest ticket.

Yards from Holyrood, crowds are returning this week to the city for the world’s biggest arts festival. Bringing down the curtain on Covid restrictions in this theatre of culture, and the country beyond, is what the Scottish audience needed.

And yet, there are reservations.

Take nightclubs, for example. At least one club owner told us that while he was delighted to have the opportunity to re-open after being shut for months, the practicalities appear prohibitive at first glance. How does he convince 1000 nightclub-goers to wear face masks indoors and where does he find the security staff to enforce it?

Next Monday will be a heavy lift, the history of Covid restrictions has taught us that much.

Nicola Sturgeon said it isn’t a day to cry freedom. No-one dare, yet.

Both pupils and staff in Scotland will also be asked to take lateral flow tests before returning to schools after the summer break and twice a week thereafter.

Ms Sturgeon also announced that the requirement for someone who is double jabbed to self-isolate after close contact with someone who has tested positive for the virus will be dropped if a negative test result is received.

Those under 18 will also be able to end self-isolation if they test negative, while those under five will be simply be "encouraged" to take a test.

The change means blanket self-isolations for entire classes will no longer occur.

EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY APRIL 9 File photo dated 04/03/20 of a woman using a laptop on a dining room table set up as a remote office to work from home. Fewer than one in seven leaders in some of the UK's biggest companies have said they expect a full-time return to offices by the end of this year, according to a new survey. Issue date: Friday April 9, 2021.
Image: People will still be advised to partially work from home if possible

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But Ms Sturgeon did warn that "no one can guarantee" that COVID-19 restrictions will not have to be re-imposed at a later date.

"We all hope - I know I certainly do - that the restrictions we lift next Monday will never again have to be re-imposed. But no-one can guarantee that," she said.

"This virus remains a threat - and as we enter winter, it may well pose challenges for us again.

"So as we have done throughout, the government will seek to take whatever action is necessary to keep the country safe."

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2021-08-03 14:05:07Z
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