Sabtu, 30 Mei 2020

Sun-seekers ignore warnings they'll be fined for breaking lockdown rules as they head to beaches - Daily Mail

Sun-seekers ignore warnings they'll be fined for breaking lockdown rules as they head to beaches with temperatures set to hit 82F – despite THREE Sage scientists saying we are lifting restrictions too soon

  • Sun-seekers jumped the gun on next stage of lockdown easing and crowded on to the nation's beaches today 
  • From Monday, groups of up to six people will be allowed to meet both in public spaces and in private gardens
  •  But Boris Johnson's preemptive announcement of the loosening last Thursday has already spurred revelry
  • Supermarkets recorded record spends on sausages, beer, and ice cream as temperatures are set to hit 82F
  • Sage members Prof Peter Horby, Sir Jeremy Farrar, Prof John Edmunds warn lockdown being lifted 'too early'
  • Government announced 324 new Covid-19 deaths yesterday as the R-rate remained between 0.7 and 0.9
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Sun-seekers jumped the gun on the next stage of lockdown easing and crowded on to the nation's beaches today. 

Restless Britons brushed aside warnings from police and scientists and were tempted outdoors by scorching temperatures, which were set to climb to highs of 82F (28C). 

From Monday, groups of up to six people will be allowed to meet both in public spaces and in private gardens, where they can even have barbecues. 

But Boris Johnson's preemptive announcement of the loosening last Thursday has already spurred a wave of revelry across the country.  

Police chiefs have warned their officers face an uphill struggle to enforce the existing rules this weekend, but have attempted to stamp out mass flouting by threatening to impose fines. 

Yet scenes at bustling seaside hotspots, especially along the south coast, showed large groups pitching up tents early this morning.

The current lockdown allows the public to travel to beauty spots to sunbathe with members of their household, or to meet one person from another household at a two-metre distance. 

Compliance with the curbs frayed further on the 68th day of lockdown as three of the nation's top scientists - all on the government's Sage panel of experts steering the crisis response - voiced concerns that restrictions were being lifted 'too early'.

Prof Peter Horby this morning lined up behind Sir Jeremy Farrar and Prof John Edmunds to break ranks and caution that measures were being relaxed when the infection rate was still not low enough.

Crowds pour on to the beach at Durdle Door, near Lulworth, Dorset, today as temperatures soard and Britain braced for more lockdown easing

Crowds pour on to the beach at Durdle Door, near Lulworth, Dorset, today as temperatures soard and Britain braced for more lockdown easing

Restless Britons brushed aside warnings from police and scientists and poured outdoors to soak up scorching temperatures, which were set to climb to highs of 82F (Sandbanks, Dorset, pictured)

Restless Britons brushed aside warnings from police and scientists and poured outdoors to soak up scorching temperatures, which were set to climb to highs of 82F (Sandbanks, Dorset, pictured)

People packed on to Camber Sands, East Sussex, this morning on Britain's 68th day enduring the coronavirus lockdown

People packed on to Camber Sands, East Sussex, this morning on Britain's 68th day enduring the coronavirus lockdown 

The south coast was bombarded with sun-seekers as people sprawled out on to the golden sands at Bournemouth (pictured)

The south coast was bombarded with sun-seekers as people sprawled out on to the golden sands at Bournemouth (pictured)

Sunbathing is allowed under the current guidelines, but only with members of your own household or one person from a different household, at a two-metre distance

Sunbathing is allowed under the current guidelines, but only with members of your own household or one person from a different household, at a two-metre distance

Bournemouth beach drew hundreds of sun-lovers on to its sands today as the south coast basked in baking hot weather

Bournemouth beach drew hundreds of sun-lovers on to its sands today as the south coast basked in baking hot weather

Beach-goers head to the coast early to secure the perfect tent pitch by the sea at Sandbanks in Dorset this morning

Beach-goers head to the coast early to secure the perfect tent pitch by the sea at Sandbanks in Dorset this morning

Six women pose for a photograph in the shallows off Bournemouth pier today as thousands pack on to beaches along the south coast

Six women pose for a photograph in the shallows off Bournemouth pier today as thousands pack on to beaches along the south coast

Revellers pitch up on the sand, armed with supplies needed to enjoy a sweltering day under the sun

Revellers pitch up on the sand, armed with supplies needed to enjoy a sweltering day under the sun

Britons crammed on to beaches this morning to soak up the sun as the country prepares to take further baby steps out of lockdown (Sandbanks in Dorset pictured)

Britons crammed on to beaches this morning to soak up the sun as the country prepares to take further baby steps out of lockdown (Sandbanks in Dorset pictured)

The four Home Nations now have significantly different sets of lockdown rules in place. For example, in England from Monday six people can meet up outdoors but in Scotland from today it is eight people

The four Home Nations now have significantly different sets of lockdown rules in place. For example, in England from Monday six people can meet up outdoors but in Scotland from today it is eight people 

How is the lockdown being eased in England from Monday? 

What's changing?

From Monday, people can meet outside in groups of up to six as long as those from different households continue to socially distance.  

- Can I visit family and friends?

Yes . This means that family groups of no more than six can meet in parks and private gardens for chats and even barbecues.

- How far am I allowed to travel?

There are no mileage limits set for how far you are allowed to drive to visit family and friends in England, Northern Ireland and Scotland, but the general advice is to remain in your local area as much as possible.

However, people in Wales will still not be allowed to travel more than five miles from their home for any reason except work or to purchase essentials.

Great, can we hug?

Sadly no. You still cannot risk infection by being too close. The same goes for handshakes or kissing.

If young children from different households are part of the group, they must not share paddling pools, climbing frames, slides or anything that would encourage them to be closer than two metres to each other. 

Can I stay overnight?

Staying overnight at someone else's home will still not be allowed anywhere in the UK, while even going indoors for any other reason than to access a garden or use the bathroom is prohibited.

However Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has advised that if the distance travelled to meet someone means that you have to use their bathroom, then 'perhaps you shouldn't be doing it'.   

Can we barbecue?

Yes, but you must wash your hands, be careful about passing food or plates and keep 6ft apart.

How about entering their house?

Only if there is no other way of getting to the back of the property. 

What about using the toilet?

You can, but you must thoroughly clean any surfaces you touch.

To be extra safe, you could even use a paper towel to open and close bathroom doors and perhaps consider using a kitchen roll to dry hands rather than a towel.

So what if it rains?

You will have to stand under an umbrella or leave. You cannot shelter in someone else's home.

Can we camp in the garden?

No, Boris Johnson said he did not want you to stay overnight.

Do I only have to see the same group?

No, you can meet different people at different times, but try not to see too many in quick succession.

Can those shielding take part?

No, they must continue to shield if they're in the clinically extremely vulnerable group and have had a letter from their GP.

What about the over-70s?

If they are not in the shielding group.

We are a family of six – can we meet anyone else?

No. The guidelines say you can meet only up to six people at any one time.

Can we visit a relative in a care home garden?

It would depend on circumstances and the care home's management.

- What else will I be allowed to do under the new measures?

In England, Monday's lockdown easing will signal the reopening of schools to allow students in nurseries, early-years settings, and Reception, Year 1 and Year 6 to return to class.

Some shops are also set to reopen, with outdoor retail and car showrooms able to resume operations. 

- When might restrictions be eased further?

Boris Johnson has flagged that more restrictions will be eased on June 15, beginning with the reopening of other non-essential retail shops such as fashion or homeware retail.

Other businesses, such as pubs, hairdressers and cinemas will have to wait until July before they can reopen, the Government has previously said.

- And what's the timeline elsewhere in the UK?

In Scotland, there is no set timeline as for when more measures might be lifted. The government's lockdown roadmap stipulates that a number of conditions must be met before any further action is taken, including evidence that the country's Covid-19 transmission is successfully under control.

Wales' First Minister Mark Drakeford is expected to announce on Friday that further plans on lifting restrictions will be unveiled in the coming weeks.

Pending the country's rate of transmission remaining below one, a host of further restrictions are set to be eased in Northern Ireland on June 8, including the reopening of outdoor sports facilities, car showrooms and some non-essential retail stores.

Outdoor weddings with a maximum of 10 people are also set to be allowed and hotels will be able to start taking forward bookings at their own risk.

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The 'R' reproduction rate sits just below one between 0.7 and 0.9, and the government announced there were 324 new Covid-19 deaths yesterday, following a pattern of decline.

Ministers are trying to juggle both keeping the R number below 1 - to extinguish the spread of infection - and fire up the economy and return to normal life. 

Today, busy traffic was pictured on the M3 around the south coast, where car parks by beaches were also rammed.   

And as people poured into beaches and parks: 

  • Senior Tories demanded Mr Johnson reduces social distancing or see apocalyptic job losses in hospitality sector;
  • Ex-education secretary Alan Johnson said teaching unions 'got it wrong' over reopening schools and must now back down and stop their 'war dance';
  • Holidaymakers arriving in Mallorca and Ibiza could face coronavirus tests at the airport and then a six-hour wait in hotels for results;
  • Durham's chief constable 'could face an internal inquiry' into her handling of Dominic Cummings' lockdown investigation after angry members of the public complain to force;
  • The BBC received 40,000 complaints in just two days after Emily Maitlis sparked an impartiality row with Dominic Cummings rant;
  • Border officials called the plan to isolate travellers to the UK 'unenforceable', with the public 'trusted' to follow rules and 'absurd loopholes' including electronic passport holders being waived through.

Police chiefs complained their officers face an impossible situation of trying to force the public to comply with existing rules while knowing many of these curbs are set to be dropped on Monday. 

Constables have ordered Britons to obey the lockdown in its current form and not pre-empt Monday's changes, warning that flouters face fines.  

Northumbria's Labour Police and Crime Commissioner Kim McGuinness said: 'The PM must have known he was going to create a situation that is difficult to police. The messaging looks like it was rushed forward to help ministers in a difficult position.'

Anthony Stansfeld, the Conservative Police and Crime Commissioner for Thames Valley, said: 'People should obey the rules – things are only just beginning to open up, so please don't pre-empt them. 

'All the relaxation of lockdown is being carefully timed by the Government's chief scientists for good reason.

'It's far better if people wait and do things at the proper time, so please don't jump the gun. A bit more freedom is coming on Monday, so I urge everyone to be patient.'

Merseyside Police warned that people would be fined if they turned up to parks and beaches in large groups across the city this weekend.

Superintendent Jonathan Davies said: 'I know people will be tempted to get outside. This is a reminder that the rules on spending time with only one other person from another household remains in place this weekend.'

There are also warnings from forces in UK holiday destinations, as it was revealed that 38 per cent of lockdown breach fines handed out on last bank holiday weekend were for overnight stays, including people using camper fans and second homes.

Devon and Cornwall police warned that they had seen a rise in people travelling into the region to stay overnight. 

Assistant chief constable Glenn Mayhew told The Telegraph: 'Please remember that mass gatherings and overnights days are still unlawful under COVID-19 regulations and where breaches are reported we will respond and act accordingly.'  

Supermarkets reported last night that shoppers were already spending record sums on sausages, beer, wine and ice cream in anticipation of weekend barbecues and picnics. Figures suggest we have experience the sunniest springs since records began in 1929.

There is even an outside chance the record for the warmest day of the year so far – 28.2C (82.8F) at Santon Downham, Suffolk, on May 20 – could be broken. 

The message from police to stick to the current rules was bolstered by the interventions from the Sage scientists.

Prof Horby, chairman of the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (NERVTAG) and a Sage member, said Britain could not afford to lose control of the virus.

He told BBC Radio 4 this morning: 'We really can't go back to a situation where we've got the numbers of cases and deaths we've had in the past.' 

It echoed similar warnings from Sir Jeremy and Prof Edmunds yesterday that the exit from lockdown is being rushed.

Labour's shadow health minister Justin Madders said: 'It is crucial for all of us that the Government gets this right. 

'Easing lockdown must be done as safely as possible. It will only work if there are effective, flexible and local systems in place that have the confidence of the public to ensure that we avoid a second peak of infections.' 

Sir Jeremy, director of the Wellcome Trust and Sage member said in a Twitter post that he 'agreed with John' on the clear science advice, appearing to reference Sage colleague Professor John Edmunds, who said on Friday the Government was 'taking risks' by relaxing measures from Monday.

Sir Jeremy also said the newly-introduced NHS test and trace system needed to be 'fully working' before measures were eased.

He wrote: 'Covid-19 spreading too fast to lift lockdown in England. Agree with John & clear science advice.

'TTI (test, trace and isolate) has to be in place, fully working, capable dealing any surge immediately, locally responsive, rapid results & infection rates have to be lower. And trusted.' 

A whistleblower told the Daily Mail that the government's track and trace system, designed to keep the UK out of lockdown, is in chaos -  chaotically recruited, ill-prepared and, in many cases, left idle for days at a time . 

'There's absolutely no chance it's ready,' the 38-year-old whistleblower from Manchester said. 'If it does happen [this week]… there will be catastrophic and continued failings from that day onwards. 

'This is serious – it's a pandemic, and lives are at risk. I'm genuinely worried about how we are about to be set loose on the public'.

Prof Horby also expressed serious doubts about the contact-tracing system, which has been heralded as the ticket out of blanker lockdown. He said: 'As we know, it's not yet fully operational so that is where the risk lies.'  

Sunbathers enjoy the warm weather on the beach near Boscombe Pier in Bournemouth

Sunbathers enjoy the warm weather on the beach near Boscombe Pier in Bournemouth

Sun-seekers head down a path leading to the beach at Durdle Door near Lulworth, Dorset, as the sun shines on the south coast

Sun-seekers head down a path leading to the beach at Durdle Door near Lulworth, Dorset, as the sun shines on the south coast

Sunbathers sprawl out on the sands at Sandbanks in Dorset this morning as the mercury climbs to 82F

Sunbathers sprawl out on the sands at Sandbanks in Dorset this morning as the mercury climbs to 82F

The promenade at Sandbanks was bustling early this morning, with cyclists and runners getting their exercise

The promenade at Sandbanks was bustling early this morning, with cyclists and runners getting their exercise 

Busy traffic heads westward along the M3 near Eastleigh, Hampshire, near the coast as hordes of beach-goers headed to the seaside

Busy traffic heads westward along the M3 near Eastleigh, Hampshire, near the coast as hordes of beach-goers headed to the seaside

Sun-seekers jumped the gun on the next stage of lockdown easing and crowded on to the nation's beaches today (Sandbanks, Dorset, pictured)

Sun-seekers jumped the gun on the next stage of lockdown easing and crowded on to the nation's beaches today (Sandbanks, Dorset, pictured)

HOW MANY LOCKDOWN FINES HAVE BEEN ISSUED IN YOUR AREA? 

Here are the total number of fines issued by police forces in England between March 27 and May 25 for alleged breaches of the coronavirus lockdown laws:

  • Avon and Somerset: 325
  • Bedfordshire: 302
  • British Transport Police (BTP): 331
  • Cambridgeshire: 132
  • Cheshire: 193
  • City of London: 70
  • Cleveland: 303
  • Cumbria: 436
  • Derbyshire: 243
  • Devon and Cornwall: 906
  • Dorset: 737
  • Durham: 155
  • Essex: 227
  • Gloucestershire: 245
  • Greater Manchester: 309
  • Hampshire: 261
  • Hertfordshire: 269
  • Humberside: 126
  • Kent: 125
  • Lancashire: 765
  • Leicestershire: 365
  • Lincolnshire: 221
  • Merseyside: 519
  • Metropolitan: 1,035
  • MoD Police: 36
  • Norfolk: 368
  • North Yorkshire: 1,032
  • Northamptonshire: 384
  • Northumbria: 243
  • Nottinghamshire: 188
  • South Yorkshire: 391
  • Staffordshire: 53
  • Suffolk: 261
  • Surrey: 632
  • Sussex: 757
  • Thames Valley: 878
  • Warwickshire: 40
  • West Mercia: 177
  • West Midlands: 442
  • West Yorkshire: 881
  • Wiltshire: 189

Total: 15,552

Number of fines issued by police forces in Wales in the same timeframe:

  • BTP: 15
  • Dyfed-Powys: 816
  • Gwent: 91
  • North Wales: 256
  • South Wales: 217

Total: 1,395 

Professor John Edmunds said many experts would 'prefer' to see the number of Covid-19 infections drop before measures such as a relaxation on social interaction restrictions were introduced.

Latest data from the Office for National Statistics suggests there are an estimated 54,000 new coronavirus infections a week in England outside of hospital and care settings, equating to nearly 8,000 per day.

The so-called R value, or reproduction rate, is currently between 0.7 and 0.9, and must remain under one to avoid a rise in infections - a key test on whether lockdown measures should be eased, with the Government stressing the need to avoid a second wave of cases which would threaten to overwhelm the NHS.

Prof Edmunds, speaking during a Science Media Centre briefing, said the decision to relax certain rules came with a degree of risk.

He said: 'I think many of us would prefer to see the incidence driven down to lower levels because that would mean we have fewer cases occurring before we relaxed the measures.

'If we had incidents at a lower level, even if the reproduction level went up a bit, we wouldn't be in a position where we were overwhelming the health service.

'I think at the moment with relatively high incidents, relaxing the measures and with an untested track and trace system, I think we are taking some risk here.

'Even if that risk doesn't play out and we keep the incidents flat, we're keeping it flat at quite a high level. The Government has launched its track and trace system designed to limit the spread of infection by ordering contacts of those who become infected with coronavirus to isolate

Prof Edmunds, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, supported the decision to essentially substitute a 'blanket approach' to containing the virus with a targeted one, adding it saw a return to 'some level of normality'.

He added: 'None of us think, who have looked at this in any great detail, that that will be sufficient to be able to hold the reproduction number below one.

'We all think we will have to have quite significant numbers of wider social distance measures in place.

'The basic reproduction number for this virus is perhaps three, maybe even more, so we cannot relax our guard by very much at all.'

He said there was a need to try and get the economy restarted, to get people back to work and to provide a boost to people's mental health.

But he said even if track and trace kept the R-value at about one, it would still result in around 8,000 community infections a day in England.

The Prime Minister's official spokesman defended the decision to announce the change on Thursday, saying: 'We've said that wherever possible we would give a period of notice in advance of changes being made, ideally 48 hours or more.

'We're enormously grateful for the efforts of the British public in sticking by the rules and getting the infection rate down and that does mean that from June 1 we will be able to allow people to have some more social contact in a safe and socially-distanced way. I'm sure that members of the public will show common sense.'

Speaking in response to the PM's announcement on Thursday that restrictions would be changed on Monday, former Tory minister Tobias Ellwood said last night: 'The nation has been incredibly disciplined to date.

'Is it wise to tell the public that they can have barbecues with friends from Monday before a sunny weekend?'  

A Home Office source also warned last night that if people breached the guidance this weekend, they risked putting lives in danger by reversing the progress that had been made in tackling the virus. 

There is also the possibility for confusion as while Wales also does not relax its lockdown rules until Monday, Scotland did so from yesterday.  

Bournemouth: Tom Tom traffic trackers show an uptick in car travel from last week, with road use slowly creeping up over the last seven days

Bournemouth: Tom Tom traffic trackers show an uptick in car travel from last week, with road use slowly creeping up over the last seven days

Brighton: An uptick in weekend travel was also recorded in this seaside town as people flooded on to the beaches

Brighton: An uptick in weekend travel was also recorded in this seaside town as people flooded on to the beaches

London: A small increase in travel was recorded in the capital from last week

London: A small increase in travel was recorded in the capital from last week

Surfers grab their boards and head along the beach at Sandbanks in Dorset today as the sun shone on the south coast

Surfers grab their boards and head along the beach at Sandbanks in Dorset today as the sun shone on the south coast

People enjoy the continued warm weather along and on the banks of the River Thames Seasonal weather, Henley on thames, Oxfordshire

People enjoy the continued warm weather along and on the banks of the River Thames Seasonal weather, Henley on thames, Oxfordshire

Swimmers brace the waters at Hythe Bay, Dover, Kent today ahead of further lockdown restriction easing on Monday

Swimmers brace the waters at Hythe Bay, Dover, Kent today ahead of further lockdown restriction easing on Monday

Paddleboarders take to the river Thames near Maidenhead today as thousands of Britons were tempted outdoors by scorching weather

Paddleboarders take to the river Thames near Maidenhead today as thousands of Britons were tempted outdoors by scorching weather

A group of six people bask under the baking sun on Brighton beach this afternoon

A group of six people bask under the baking sun on Brighton beach this afternoon

Camber Sands car park in East Sussex was rammed today as beach-goers arrived to soak up the sun this Saturday

Camber Sands car park in East Sussex was rammed today as beach-goers arrived to soak up the sun this Saturday

Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust
Professor John Edmunds of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust and Sage member said in a Twitter post that he 'agreed with John' on the clear science advice, appearing to reference Sage colleague Professor John Edmunds, who said on Friday the Government was 'taking risks' by relaxing measures from Monday

Four nations, four lockdowns: How different rules now apply in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland (so who's following what science?) 

ByJack Maidment, Deputy Political Editor For Mailonline 

Long-awaited changes are being made to the UK's coronavirus lockdown with the four Home Nations now adopting different approaches to the loosening of draconian rules. 

Boris Johnson set out his plans which mostly only relate to England at a Downing Street press conference last night with those changes coming into force on Monday. 

But more limited changes in Scotland came into force today while Wales and Northern Ireland are also doing their own thing. 

Below is a breakdown of how different rules apply in different parts of the country. 

ENGLAND 

Perhaps the most eye-grabbing change announced by Mr Johnson last night was that as of Monday groups of up to six people will be allowed to meet up outdoors. 

Social distancing rules to stay at least two metres apart remain in place but the six people can be from different households. 

This is a much more flexible approach than has been taken in Scotland and Wales. 

These group gatherings can take place either outdoors in a public park or within a private garden but people have been told to be careful if guests need to travel through a house to get to a garden. Barbecues are allowed. 

England's new rules mean there is no limit on how far people can travel from their home. 

Meanwhile, people can also exercise as much as they want - a change which was announced by Mr Johnson in his first wave of loosening. 

When it comes to shops, all non-essential premises will be allowed to start reopening from June 15. That means most High Street stores like clothes shops and shoe shops. 

Other businesses, such as pubs, hairdressers and cinemas will have to wait until July before they can reopen, the Government has previously said. 

Primary schools and nurseries will begin their phased reopening from June 1 while some year 10 and 12 students will be able to return to secondary schools from June 15.   

SCOTLAND 

Nicola Sturgeon's lockdown changes came into force as of today, in time for what is expected to be a sunny weekend with highs of up to 80F. 

The First Minister's plans allow groups of up to eight people to meet up outside. 

However, they must all be from just two households. Similar to in England, these gatherings can either take place in private gardens or in outdoor spaces like parks.  

One difference is that people are not supposed to go into someone else's house - even if it that is the only way to get to the garden. 

Social distancing rules remain at the two metre figure while there is no legal limit on travel away from home. 

However, the Scottish government has encouraged people to 'stay local' which means not travelling more than approximately five miles. 

Ms Sturgeon has advised that if the distance travelled to meet someone means that you have to use their bathroom, then 'perhaps you shouldn't be doing it'. 

People in Scotland are also allowed to exercise as much as they want outside. 

Scotland's easing will enable people to visit garden centres and play some sports where social distancing can easily be maintained, such as golf and tennis. 

There is less clarity north of the border on when non-essential shops could reopen with the Scottish government yet to set a date for the return of the High Street. 

Scotland's education plan is also much more cautious than England's with schools not expected to start reopening until August 11. 

In Scotland, there is no set timeline for when more measures might be lifted. 

WALES 

First Minister Mark Drakeford set out his plans for lockdown loosening this morning. 

Outdoor gatherings will be permitted from Monday but only with people from two different households. 

However, the number of people who can meet up outdoors in a socially distanced way is unlimited. 

The Welsh plan also allows people to use gardens for their gatherings although like in Scotland people are not allowed to go into other people's homes. 

In Wales there is a broad five mile limit on travel away from home although the Welsh government has stressed travel should remain 'local' and not generally further than five miles, seemingly giving some room for interpretation. 

People in Wales are also allowed to exercise as much as they want outside but no date has yet been set for the return of non-essential shops. 

However, Mr Drakeford said today that non-essential retail businesses that can comply with social distancing rules should start to prepare to reopen over the next three weeks.

Mr Drakeford said a decision on whether they will reopen will be taken at the next review of lockdown measures on June 18 and will depend on scientific and medical evidence.

No date has yet been set for the reopening of schools. 

NORTHERN IRELAND 

Northern Ireland was the first of the four Home Nations to move on loosening rules relating to socialising. 

Groups of between four and six people are allowed to meet outdoors. 

They can all be from different households and social distancing at two metres must be stuck to.

Gardens are allowed to be used for those gatherings but access to another person's house is not permitted. 

People can travel as far as they want from their home - just like in England - with no restrictions on the amount of outdoor exercise allowed. 

Some non-essential shops are expected to begin reopening from June 15. 

Pending the country's rate of transmission remaining below one, a host of further restrictions are set to be eased in Northern Ireland on June 8. 

That could include the reopening of outdoor sports facilities, car showrooms and some non-essential retail stores.

Outdoor weddings with a maximum of 10 people are also set to be allowed and hotels will be able to start taking forward bookings at their own risk.

However, there is a longer wait for schools with pupils not expected to return to the classroom until the new academic year begins in September.

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2020-05-30 12:39:51Z
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Risk in UK lockdown easing too soon, warn scientists - Covid-19: Top stories this morning - BBC - BBC

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  1. Risk in UK lockdown easing too soon, warn scientists - Covid-19: Top stories this morning - BBC  BBC
  2. Scientists recommended face coverings weeks before Government advice  Clydebank Post
  3. Covid-19 spreading too fast to lift lockdown in England – Sage advisers  The Guardian
  4. Coronavirus: Relaxing lockdown 'risky' and a 'political decision'  BBC News
  5. Coronavirus 'spreading too fast' to ease lockdown restrictions, top scientists warn  The Independent
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-05-30 08:30:03Z
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Coronavirus map LIVE: Panic Boris moving 'TOO FAST' on lockdown with fears virus to surge - Express

Boris Johnson's plans to ease lockdown restrictions in England has made Government scientific advisers uneasy as there are 8,000 new coronavirus infections daily. They fear that easing restrictions now could lead to a second wave. 

SAGE scientist John Edmunds, a professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: "We cannot relax our guard by very much at all."

The warning was echoed by Director of the Wellcome Trust Jeremy Farrar, who also sits on the committee.

Speaking out on Twitter, he said: "COVID-19 spreading too fast to lift lockdown in England.

"I agree with John and clear science advice.

"TTI has to be in place, fully working, capable and dealing any surge immediately, locally responsive, rapid results and infection rates have to be lower, and trusted."

Yesterday it was revealed the UK remain on level 4 of the COVID Alert system despite the Prime Minister reducing lockdown measures in England from Monday.

Mr Johnson previously said he would not relax measures until England was at level 3.

FOLLOW EXPRESS.CO.UK BELOW FOR LIVE UPDATES

8.47am update: Russia now has third largest outbreak in the world

Russian officials said 8,952 new infections had been confirmed in the country over the past 24 hours, bringing the national tally to 396,575, the third highest reported total in the world after the United States and Brazil.

On Saturday it reported 181 deaths from the coronavirus in the last 24 hours, down from the record 232 deaths registered the previous day and pushing the nationwide death toll to 4,555.

8.20am update: Fears of mass redundancies in months to come

There are fears unemployment will surge when the furlough scheme which has been implemented by the Chancellor Rishi Sunak comes to an end in October.

Currently the Government has agreed to pay 80 percent of wages for those unable to work during the coronavirus pandemic. The amount paid by the Treasury will drop in August as employers are asked to contribute to towards salaries of those unable to work before the scheme is stopped completely in the autumn.

However, Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham as warned "a huge number of businesses will go bust."

He said: "I have got a night-time economy adviser in Greater Manchester and he texted me yesterday after the Chancellor's announcement to say that the stopping of the furlough scheme in October will lead to huge redundancies in the hospitality sector.

"And, I would say, it almost undermines the point of having the furlough scheme in the first place."

7.50am update: Pubs could be serving pints again in just four weeks

Pubs with beer garden could re-open as soon as July, a Government minister admitted yesterday.

Speaking about how the UK's unwinding of lockdown would likely continue in the mon the ahead, Environment Secretary George Eustice implied pubs and restaurants with outdoor seating would be the first in businesses in the hospitality sector to open.

He said: "The sectors that are going to have the greatest challenge getting back to work, which we recognise, and I'm sure the Chancellor recognises this too, the hospitality sector and some of those other ticketed venues, in particular cinemas and in particular theatres, restaurants and pubs, will also face a challenge getting back into operation.

"And that is why we won't be loosening the restrictions on them until at least July and even then it is likely that in the case of pubs and restaurants it will begin with beer gardens and outdoor areas only."

7.35am update: Trump attacks WHO as China's puppet as he vows to end US relationship

The United States will end its relationship with the World Health Organization over the body's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, US President Donald Trump said on Friday, accusing the UN agency of becoming a puppet of China.

The move to quit the Geneva-based body, which the United States formally joined in 1948, comes amid growing tensions between Washington and Beijing over the coronavirus outbreak.

The virus first emerged in China's Wuhan city late last year.

Speaking in the White House Rose Garden, Trump said Chinese officials "ignored their reporting obligations" to the WHO about the virus - that has killed hundreds of thousands of people globally - and pressured the agency to "mislead the world."

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2020-05-30 07:34:09Z
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Chancellor Rishi Sunak is right to wean Britain off furlough scheme before it bankrupts us - The Sun

Wean us off

THE furlough scheme has to be scaled back. Rishi Sunak is right to try to wean us off it before it bankrupts us.

For all the other accusations levelled at the Government during the Covid crisis, few critics can fault the Chancellor’s efforts to keep us afloat. His bailouts have saved millions of jobs.

⚠️ Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates

 Chancellor Rishi Sunak's furlough scheme was an emergency measure and not a long-term Corbynite fantasy

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Chancellor Rishi Sunak's furlough scheme was an emergency measure and not a long-term Corbynite fantasyCredit: Getty

They have been generous, perhaps to a fault.

But they were an emergency measure, not some long-term Corbynite fantasy.

We are surprised, though, that Mr Sunak has not made different rules for different sectors.

If pubs and restaurants are still prevented from fully reopening by autumn, why are their staff subject to the same furlough cuts as those whose firms have been revived?

That said, we are delighted he HAS heeded The Sun’s calls for a new grant for self-employed people.

That is only fair, given the handouts to employees.

These payments have given workers a fighting chance, but they cannot do more than that.

Mr Sunak often says he will not be able to save every job — and hundreds of thousands will still be lost.

The Chancellor’s next decision must be to resist siren calls for higher taxes to pay off the debt.

We need the opposite: A low-tax, post-Brexit economy which attracts investment and creates a tidal wave of new jobs for those thrown out of work.

Policing Beeb

THE executive hired to police political bias in the BBC’s social media output has his work cut out.

The problem being that the staff’s blanket liberal-left Remainer mindset is so ingrained, and the bubble in which they live so hermetically sealed, that they genuinely believe their debatable opinions to be incontrovertible fact, since everyone they know shares them.

 Emily Maitlis thought it beyond dispute that Dominic Cummings broke lockdown rules

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Emily Maitlis thought it beyond dispute that Dominic Cummings broke lockdown rulesCredit: BBC

Newsnight’s Emily Maitlis thought it beyond dispute that Dominic Cummings broke lockdown rules and that the country was aghast the Government couldn’t see it.

She seemed unaware this was still an open question.

Then ­Durham police all but cleared him.

Under its charter the publicly-funded BBC MUST be totally unbiased. The managers apparently grasp this better than the journalists.

Richard Sambrook should ban staff from even hinting at a political view, on screen or on social media — or urge them to find a job elsewhere which allows for it.

NHS fighters

WHEN Covid is over, let us never forget the heroic role BAME people played on the NHS frontline.

Anthony Joshua raises an important point about their dedication and the disproportionate number who have lost their lives.

 Anthony Joshua is right to recognise the sacrifices of our BAME NHS staff

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Anthony Joshua is right to recognise the sacrifices of our BAME NHS staffCredit: BackGrid

And we’re delighted he’s backing our Who Cares Wins awards.

They too will celebrate the diversity which helps make the NHS what it is.

Nominate your NHS heroes for The Sun’s Who Cares Wins health awards 



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2020-05-30 02:20:03Z
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Cummings didn't break rules and it’s right Boris didn’t sack him, says CAROLE MALONE - Express

And although his 60-mile round trip to Barnard Castle to sit by the river with his wife and son MAY have constituted a "minor breach" there was no flouting of "social distancing". But that "minor breach" apparently warranted the kind of deranged, hysterical, maniacal abuse heaped on Cummings this week which couldn't have been worse had he actually murdered someone. 

Leftie politicos and a 40-strong bunch of (mainly) Tory Remainer MPs had jumped on this story like a pack of slavering hyenas pretending their anger was all about this "insult" to the British people and how unfair it was that they'd stuck to the rules and the architect of those rules had broken them.

Sorry, but anyone who believes the buckets of bile chucked at Cummings from those in the Westminster bubble and certain sections of the media was simply about breaking lockdown rules need their heads testing. No, for rebel Tories this was their chance to take down the man who made Brexit happen and the Left wanted the strategist who'd seen off Corbyn, the Labour party and led the Tories to their biggest election victory in decades, to be crushed.

I absolutely understand the British people were angry at what looked like "one law for the privileged and another for us the plebs". I get they felt keenly the unfairness that the second most powerful man in government looked like he'd been flouting the rules when they couldn't. Only it turns out he didn't. 

And in the week one in seven admitted violating the lockdown (and there'll be heaps more who won't admit it) I'm not sure how many people are entitled to take the moral high ground here. Cummings took his wife and child to a place they could be looked after if they became sick.

But this "minor breach" can't ever justify the venom heaped on Cummings and his family by the angry mob that laid siege to his home back in March and is there again now - screaming, shouting and threatening, while his wife and four-year-old son cower inside. And why in this country is it not illegal for mobs to behave like this - behaviour the Left actually encourages? 

My view might be an unpopular one but I think it's right Boris didn't sack him, first, because his trip north didn't breach the rules but more importantly kicking him out would have been giving in to the baying lynch mob who wanted Cummings' head on a pole for their own political ends NOT out of kinship with the British people. I'm no fan of DC - he has a chronic inability to relate to people. He's arrogant and his attitude is almost always: "I'm right and you're wrong."

Had he shown a scintilla of remorse or understanding of how betrayed the British public felt when it was believed he'd broken the rules, they might have been willing to accept he did what he did because he believed it was in the best interests of his family. That said Boris (and Britain) needs the man who's been described as an "evil genius" because Cummings is determined to reform the Civil Service - the reason it piled in against him last week. 

It's a job I'm not sure anyone else in government has the stomach for but it must be done because we can't have arrogant, unelected, overpaid bureaucrats believing THEY run the country.

And we need him to see Brexit through because it's clear after last week the Remain lobby still lives in hope of trashing it.

Cummings' misdemeanour was minor. And all the cries of "Yes, but he's the man who made the rules" doesn't justify his wife and child being terrorised or him been pressured to resign over something everyone else would get a sixty quid fine for.

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2020-05-30 05:54:59Z
52780820666698

Coronavirus: Risk in UK lockdown easing too soon, warn scientists - BBC News

Scientific advisers to the government have warned of the risk of lifting lockdown in England, as the UK heads into the weekend before rules change.

Professor John Edmunds said it was a "political decision" to ease measures; Sir Jeremy Farrar said the NHS test and trace system should be "fully working".

More than two people will be able to meet outside from Monday and in England schools will reopen to some pupils.

Police have urged people not to break social distancing rules this weekend.

The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), which advises the government, has published details of its confidential meetings.

It includes minutes of 34 Sage sessions, going back to 22 January, and a series of scientific reports.

They show one Sage meeting on 23 April estimated there would be only 1,000 cases per day by mid-May.

Instead, estimates by the Office for National Statistics suggest there are currently 8,000 cases per day in England alone. Those figures do not include cases in care homes or hospitals.

Prof Edmunds, from the London School of Tropical Hygiene and Medicine and a member of Sage, said the levels of the coronavirus were still "very high" and many scientists would rather the number of cases declined before measures were relaxed.

Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust and a member of Sage, said on Twitter that Covid-19 is "spreading too fast to lift lockdown in England" and NHS test and trace "has to be fully working and infection rates have to be lower".

The Sage documents warned there would be "little time" to re-impose stricter lockdown measures if the infection rate started to creep up again.

The documents also showed only half of people isolate for seven days when they become sick.

Papers revealed that Sage advice given to the government in April said it was "likely" the infection rate - the R-number - would go above one (the point at which the epidemic starts to grow again) if non-essential shops were reopened.

Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham called for the government to reveal the regional R number so that the public can judge the level of risk.

He told Radio 4's Today programme: "The time has come to empower the public with much more information about the level of risk in their own part of the country.

"And I think it's now imperative that the government publishes this regional R number on a regular basis so the public can judge what they should do in response to the level of risk they're facing."

It comes as police forces in England have warned people to take care in busy areas and beauty spots and as a fine weekend of weather is forecast.

From Monday, all four UK nations are due to have guidelines in place allowing more than two people to meet outside.

Each of the UK's nations has a different approach - and timescale - to lifting lockdown. England is the only nation to reopen primary schools to selected year groups on Monday.

In Scotland, two separate households - up to a maximum of eight people - can meet outdoors and in Northern Ireland, groups of up to six people who do not live together can meet outdoors.

In Wales, any number of people from two different households will be able to meet each other outside from Monday, but beauty spots remain closed.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The warnings come as former prime minister Theresa May has written to her constituents saying Boris Johnson's chief adviser Dominic Cummings did not "follow the spirit" of the lockdown guidance.

Mr Cummings drove more than 260 miles from London to County Durham with his wife who had coronavirus symptoms in March, at a time when the public was being told to "stay home".

He also made a 50-mile round-trip to Barnard Castle 15 days later - a journey which police said might have broken lockdown rules.

Mrs May said in a letter to her constituents in Maidenhead, Berkshire, that she can "well understand the anger" of people who had obeyed the guidance.

On Friday, Chancellor Rishi Sunak set out how the UK's coronavirus furlough scheme will finish at the end of October

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2020-05-30 01:53:39Z
52780819652971

Jumat, 29 Mei 2020

Coronavirus: Risk in UK lockdown easing too soon, warn scientists - BBC News

Scientific advisers to the government have warned of the risk of lifting lockdown in England, as the UK heads into the weekend before rules change.

Professor John Edmunds said it was a "political decision" to ease measures; Sir Jeremy Farrar said the NHS test and trace system should be "fully working".

More than two people will be able to meet outside from Monday and in England schools will reopen to some pupils.

Police have urged people not to break social distancing rules this weekend.

The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), which advises the government, has published details of its confidential meetings.

It includes minutes of 34 Sage sessions, going back to 22 January, and a series of scientific reports.

They show one Sage meeting on 23 April estimated there would be only 1,000 cases per day by mid-May.

Instead, estimates by the Office for National Statistics suggest there are currently 8,000 cases per day in England alone. Those figures do not include cases in care homes or hospitals.

Prof Edmunds, from the London School of Tropical Hygiene and Medicine and a member of Sage, said the levels of the coronavirus were still "very high" and many scientists would rather the number of cases declined before measures were relaxed.

Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust and a member of Sage, said on Twitter that Covid-19 is "spreading too fast to lift lockdown in England", NHS test and trace had to be fully working and infection rates have to be lower.

The Sage documents warned there would be "little time" to re-impose stricter lockdown measures if the infection rate started to creep up again.

The documents also showed only half of people isolate for seven days when they become sick.

Papers revealed that Sage advice given to the Government in April said it was "likely" the infection rate - the R-number - would go above one (the point at which the epidemic starts to grow again) if non-essential shops were reopened.

It comes as police forces in England have warned people to take care in busy areas and beauty spots and as a fine weekend of weather is forecast.

From Monday, all four UK nations are due to have guidelines in place allowing more than two people to meet outside.

Each of the UK's nations has a different approach - and timescale - to lifting lockdown. England is the only nation to reopen primary schools to selected year groups on Monday.

In Scotland, two separate households - up to a maximum of eight people - can meet outdoors and in Northern Ireland, groups of up to six people who do not live together can meet outdoors.

In Wales, any number of people from two different households will be able to meet each other outside from Monday, but beauty spots remain closed.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The warnings come as former prime minister Theresa May has written to her constituents saying Boris Johnson's chief adviser Dominic Cummings did not "follow the spirit" of the lockdown guidance.

Mr Cummings drove more than 260 miles from London to County Durham with his wife who had coronavirus symptoms in March, at a time when the public was being told to "stay home".

He also made a 50-mile round-trip to Barnard Castle 15 days later - a journey which police said might have broken lockdown rules.

Mrs May said in a letter to her constituents in Maidenhead, Berkshire, that she can "well understand the anger" of people who had obeyed the guidance.

On Friday, Chancellor Rishi Sunak set out how the UK's coronavirus furlough scheme will finish at the end of October

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2020-05-30 01:29:05Z
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