Jumat, 12 Juni 2020

Boris Johnson scrapped pandemic team before coronavirus hit UK - Daily Mail

Revealed: Boris Johnson scrapped Cabinet Ministers pandemic team six months before coronavirus hit Britain

  • The PM abolished the Threats, Hazards, Resilience and Contingency Committee 
  • MPs such as Michael Gove and Matt Hancock were part of the pandemic team 
  • The group was scrapped by Mr Johnson just days after he entered No10 last July 
  • COVID-19 hit the UK six months later - and has claimed 41,841 lives so far
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

Boris Johnson scrapped a team of Cabinet ministers tasked with protecting the UK from a pandemic six months before coronavirus arrived, a Mail investigation has found.

The Government’s ‘anti-pandemic committee’, which included senior ministers Michael Gove, Matt Hancock and Gavin Williamson, was disbanded without discussing virus control plans.

The group, officially known as the Threats, Hazards, Resilience and Contingency Committee (THRCC), was supposed to ensure the UK was ready to cope with a pandemic.

In July 2019, Boris Johnson scrapped a 'pandemic team' just six months before the virus hit the UK, a Mail investigation has learned

But it was mothballed by former prime minister Theresa May on the advice of Cabinet Secretary Sir Mark Sedwill so ministers and officials could focus on Brexit. 

It was abolished by Mr Johnson days after he entered No10 last July as part of a vow to streamline Whitehall.

Six months later Covid-19 arrived.

Experts claim the Prime Minister’s delay in ordering a lockdown is partly why the UK’s death toll is so high. 

Last night, a former Cabinet minister who was a member of THRCC until it was axed said it could have ensured the Government reacted more quickly to coronavirus, adding: ‘Once the pandemic took hold in Italy... alarm bells would have been ringing.

Senior MPs Michael Gove (pictured left) and Matt Hancock (right) were part of the Cabinet team tasked with discussing virus control plans

Senior MPs Michael Gove (pictured left) and Matt Hancock (right) were part of the Cabinet team tasked with discussing virus control plans

Fellow Tory MP Gavin Williamson (pictured) was also part of the pandemic team

Fellow Tory MP Gavin Williamson (pictured) was also part of the pandemic team

‘We would have stress-tested the Government’s contingency plans for dealing with a pandemic.’

The disclosure that the committee was scrapped is embarrassing for Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, who would be a member were it still running.

In July 2018 he was the security minister behind a Home Office report that insisted THRCC had a vital role in guarding against a pandemic.

Mr Wallace’s ‘biological security strategy’ said an influenza pandemic was ‘one of the most significant civil emergency risks facing the UK’, adding: ‘Such an outbreak could have the potential to cause hundreds of thousands of fatalities and cost the UK tens of billions of pounds.

‘Significant outbreaks of disease are among the highest impact risks faced by any society, threatening lives and causing disruption to public services and the economy.’

The THRCC was a sub-committee of the National Security Council (NSC), which is chaired by Mr Johnson and made up of intelligence chiefs and senior ministers. 

Fifteen Cabinet ministers sat on the THRCC, which was chaired by Mrs May’s deputy prime minister David Lidington. Members included chancellor Philip Hammond, home secretary Sajid Javid and foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt.

A former minister said fears that the UK was heading for a No Deal Brexit led to THRCC being wound down in late 2018 by Sir Mark, adding: ‘We were having to spend more time on EU exit strategy and less on everything else. 

The coronavirus pandemic has claimed 41,481 lives in the UK with the nation going into lockdown at the end of March

The coronavirus pandemic has claimed 41,481 lives in the UK with the nation going into lockdown at the end of March

'It was felt that if we were going to get our ducks in a row to prepare for the risk of a No Deal scenario we had to slow down on things including THRCC.’

Labour’s ex-foreign secretary Dame Margaret Beckett, who chairs the National Security Council Committee that oversees the NSC, pledged to investigate the axing of the THRCC as part of a cross-party inquiry into the Government’s readiness for a pandemic.

She said: ‘The role of the Threats, Hazards, Resilience and Contingency sub-committee is exactly the kind of thing we will take an interest in.’

No10 and Mr Wallace declined to comment. The Cabinet Office said: ‘The Government has taken the right steps at the right time to combat this pandemic. We regularly test our pandemic plans.’

Additional reporting: Owen Bennett

CHIEF NURSE 'DROPPED FROM NO10 BRIEFING OVER CUMMINGS' 

Not supportive: England’s chief nurse Ruth May was dropped from a No10 press briefing

Not supportive: England’s chief nurse Ruth May was dropped from a No10 press briefing

By Sophie Borland, Health Editor for the Daily Mail 

England's chief nurse was dropped from a Downing Street press briefings for refusing to back Dominic Cummings, it has been claimed.

Ruth May (above) had been due to appear on June 1 alongside Health Secretary Matt Hancock.

But during practice questions just before the briefing, she was asked about the Prime Minister’s chief aide and his apparent breach of the lockdown rules.

She refused to support him and was withdrawn from the event, senior NHS sources claimed.

Two days earlier the deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van Tam had suggested at the conference that he was uneasy about Mr Cummings’s actions by saying the lockdown rules ‘apply to all’. 

He has not appeared at the press conferences since.

A senior NHS source told The Independent: ‘Everyone is being asked to support the Government positions prior to doing a press conference. If they don’t, they get dropped.

Mrs May (right) was due to appear with Health Secretary Matt Hancock (left) on June 1 but was withdrawn after not supporting Dominic Cummings following the Tory aide's scandal

Mrs May (right) was due to appear with Health Secretary Matt Hancock (left) on June 1 but was withdrawn after not supporting Dominic Cummings following the Tory aide's scandal

‘First it was Dominic Cummings, then easing lockdown and now the R-rate and the two-metre rule.’ 

No 10 denied Mrs May was dropped for her views on Mr Cummings and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said at last night’s daily briefing: ‘I don’t think this is true.’

Mr Cummings travelled 260 miles to Durham in March with his wife – who was displaying virus symptoms – and their son. 

He also admitted driving 30 miles south to the market town of Barnard Castle, claiming it was to test his eyesight.

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2020-06-13 00:21:18Z
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Priti Patel's outrage at Labour MPs who try to 'silence' her - Daily Mail

The Labour MPs who want to silence me are the racists, says Priti Patel: Home Secretary reveals the racist abuse she suffered at school, her outrage at boarding up of Churchill and argues the real bigots are on the left

  • Priti Patel had been defending herself on Monday against suggestions she did not ‘understand racial equality’
  • In an exclusive interview, Patel said she 'doesn't conform' to 'their version of what it is to be an ethnic minority'
  •  Sadiq Khan has, in order to protect them, ordered the boarding up of Churchill’s statue and the Cenotaph
  • But the Home Secretary says: 'We should "free" Churchill. He is the defender of our democracy and freedom'
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Home Secretary Priti Patel is incandescent. ‘They are trying to silence me because I don’t conform to their version of what it is to be an ethnic minority,’ she seethes. ‘They think they have a licence to speak for everybody from an ethnic minority community.

‘That is not the case. It is simply not the case. We’re all different. We’re all individuals. What they are saying is racist in itself, and I don’t think we should lose sight of that.’

‘They’ are the 31 MPs — ‘Left of Left of the Labour Party more associated with Jeremy Corbyn,’ says Priti — who have sent a vile letter accusing her of ‘gaslighting’ others from minority communities after she spoke about her own experience of racism earlier this week.

Priti, the daughter of Ugandan Asian immigrants, had been defending herself in the Commons on Monday against suggestions by Labour MPs that she did not ‘understand racial equality’ in light of the Black Lives Matter protests.

Home Secretary Priti Patel, pictured, said of the suggestions made by Labour MPs in the Commons on Monday: ‘They are trying to silence me because I don’t conform to their version of what it is to be an ethnic minority'

Home Secretary Priti Patel, pictured, said of the suggestions made by Labour MPs in the Commons on Monday: ‘They are trying to silence me because I don’t conform to their version of what it is to be an ethnic minority'

For this vocal supporter of the late Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, it was her ‘the-lady-is-not-for-turning’ moment. Priti’s words, spoken clearly and calmly at the Despatch Box, were devastating in their emotional impact.

‘It must have been a very different Home Secretary who, as a child, was frequently called a Paki in the playground,’ she fired back. ‘A very different Home Secretary who was racially abused in the streets or even advised to drop her surname and use her husband’s in order to advance her career.

‘A different Home Secretary recently characterised . . . in The Guardian newspaper as a fat cow with a ring thrtough its nose — something that was not only racist but offensive, both culturally and religiously.’

Priti, 48, carries her Asian ethnicity with pride, not as a weapon. ‘People who know me know that I am a freedom fighter,’ she says. ‘My father always told me: ‘‘Hold your head up high and go forwards. We live in a great country where we have the freedom to succeed.”

‘Here I am, the most senior woman in the British Government — as Home Secretary not because of privilege, but through sheer hard work, as my parents taught me, and because I had the freedom to succeed.’

It is why Priti has agreed to this exclusive interview. We meet in the Home Office where, in the lift, there is a poster of Sir Robert Peel, who served twice as Prime Minister and is regarded as the father of modern British policing.

His is one of the statues that some Black Lives Matter activists want to ‘topple’.

Add to this the fact that London Mayor Sadiq Khan has, in order to protect them, ordered the boarding up of Sir Winston Churchill’s statue and the Cenotaph, a memorial to those who have given their lives for this country and, well, let’s just say there’s a lot of hand-slamming on the desk during the time we spend together.

Patel as a child, pictured with her father. She said: ‘I haven’t spoken to my dad this week because it’s been quite busy, but I know he would think that Churchill is a hero of our country'

Patel as a child, pictured with her father. She said: ‘I haven’t spoken to my dad this week because it’s been quite busy, but I know he would think that Churchill is a hero of our country'

‘We should “free” Churchill,’ she says. ‘He is the defender of our democracy and freedom.

‘We have seen the desecration of war memorials [in some violent outbreaks involving a minority of protestors during last weekend’s Black Lives Matter marches], which is thoroughly unacceptable. Now we’re seeing a national hero being boarded up. I think this is a sad reflection on the Mayor of London because had he stood up for the right thing, had he called out the minority who were subversive in a peaceful protest, had he pulled up the thuggery in the right way, we would not be seeing the boarding up of our national hero.’

She slams her hand on the desk.

‘One of Dad’s sayings as I was growing up was: “We have freedom because we live in an open, democratic society.” When we hear the Labour Party being divisive, being hateful — trying to erase the past, which is what, I think, they are trying to do — it incenses me.

‘I haven’t spoken to my dad this week because it’s been quite busy, but I know he would think that Churchill is a hero of our country. He fought against fascism and racism in Britain and Europe and has given us the freedom to live our lives the way we do today.’

What of the other statues that some Black Lives Matter activists are threatening to topple, the men who made their fortunes from the slave trade, for example?

‘We cannot pretend everything that has happened in the past is right, but that doesn’t mean we can erase it. We have to learn from our past and at the same time look forwards.

The now-Home Secretary with her husband Alex Sawyer at the Investec Derby Day in 2014 in Epsom, Surrey

The now-Home Secretary with her husband Alex Sawyer at the Investec Derby Day in 2014 in Epsom, Surrey

‘We need our children to understand our past so they are prepared for the future. I can see some [of the Labour MPs] who signed that letter to me have failed to understand that. They seem to think everyone should be trapped in their version of history or hold their views. That is not acceptable.’

In this most unsettling of weeks, Priti Patel is, according to many political pundits, one of the few members of the Cabinet who have stepped up to the plate and ‘shown balls’ as the nation’s history is being literally vandalised in front of our eyes.

She is charming — but steely — just as her political hero Lady Thatcher was, and she is adamant that those who have committed these acts of vandalism and violence will be held to account.

Before our interview she had been in a meeting for more than an hour with police leaders from around the country.

‘Your readers have seen the appalling and sickening scenes of police officers being assaulted and abused day in day out, as we’ve seen peaceful protests subverted by thugs with alternative motivations.’

‘There is a lot of work taking place — gathering of evidence — before we charge people,’ she says.

‘We are still living with a Covid-19 pandemic, so it’s absolutely right to urge people not to go out and protest.

‘Here we are, sitting socially distanced,’ she says, gesturing to the three of us seated two metres apart. ‘There is a severe public health crisis in this country, so I urge people not to attend the protests [this weekend] and stay at home, particularly for the community that is most affected by coronavirus.’

The black community? She nods. ‘We are not like America — absolutely not. Our policing is not like America. We police by consent in this country. The police have operational independence. We are nothing like America.

‘The fact you are sitting here speaking to me, a woman from an Asian minority background, shows we have such great opportunities in this country. We really do.

‘It pains me to hear people talk our country down. If this was a racist country, I would not be sitting where I am. We are a great, great country and we are a world away from where we were 20, 30 or 40 years ago.’

Forty-odd years ago, Priti was that six-year-old child enduring the dreadful taunts of ‘Paki’ in the school playground.

‘Obviously we’re talking a long time ago, but I can still remember the level of hurt and fear.’

Were there tears? She nods. 

Patel pictured as a baby with her mother, who came to the UK from Gujarat via Uganda. Forty-odd years ago, Priti was that six-year-old child enduring the dreadful taunts of ‘Paki’ in the school playground

Patel pictured as a baby with her mother, who came to the UK from Gujarat via Uganda. Forty-odd years ago, Priti was that six-year-old child enduring the dreadful taunts of ‘Paki’ in the school playground

‘Yes, I hated it,’ she says. ‘I remember being six or seven years old and wanting to go home for lunch to get away from it. It was just horrible. Real abuse.’

There’s a sadness writ large across Priti’s face as she speaks. ‘My dad decided he wanted to change my school. I never forget my Mum saying: “We can change the school but it doesn’t mean things will change dramatically.”

‘My mum and dad were shopkeepers, so we heard all sorts of nasty words and language. They were very different times.’

Priti’s parents, Sushil and Anjana, emigrated to Britain in the late 1960s so her father could study for a degree in mechanical engineering. But their plans were turned upside down when despot President Idi Amin, expelled Uganda’s Asian minority in the early Seventies. 

Suddenly, Priti’s father was forced to give up his education to earn a living and support his parents, brother and sister who fled to England.

‘If you think what the British government did for Ugandan Asians, it’s phenomenal, which is why, in particular sitting here, I feel so strongly about our moral commitment and responsibility to the people of Hong Kong,’ she says. ‘The Prime Minister, the Foreign Secretary and I are committed to creating a bespoke way for them to come here.’

More than two million of them? She nods. 

‘It speaks again for the values of our country and the open tolerant country we are. Look . . .’ she nods towards two maps of the British Isles on the wall of her office. One is from 2017 and one from 2019.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan, pictured above, has, in order to protect them, ordered the boarding up of Sir Winston Churchill’s statue and the Cenotaph, a memorial to those who have given their lives for this country (file photo)

London Mayor Sadiq Khan, pictured above, has, in order to protect them, ordered the boarding up of Sir Winston Churchill’s statue and the Cenotaph, a memorial to those who have given their lives for this country (file photo)

A demonstrator reacts in front of graffiti on a statue of Winston Churchill in Parliament Square during a Black Lives Matter protest in London on June 7, following the death of George Floyd who died in police custody in Minneapolis

A demonstrator reacts in front of graffiti on a statue of Winston Churchill in Parliament Square during a Black Lives Matter protest in London on June 7, following the death of George Floyd who died in police custody in Minneapolis

The boarded up Churchill statue in London, pictured on 12 June. The Mayor of London said the capital city's landmarks, including street names, would be reviewed by a commission to removing those with links to slavery

The boarded up Churchill statue in London, pictured on 12 June. The Mayor of London said the capital city's landmarks, including street names, would be reviewed by a commission to removing those with links to slavery

‘We won a General Election because we focused on levelling up across the country. We want to deliver that and give opportunity to all.’

She speaks with a passion that is borne from her own life experience.

‘Life was hard for my parents — but you just get on with it,’ she says. ‘When my dad gave up his studies, they rented a room from an elderly man who was known to me as Uncle Fred, in Finsbury Park [North London].

‘My dad bought a shop for his own parents and then he bought his own shop — a newsagent’s.

‘From there, we went to Norfolk, where he bought a post office and a grocery shop. I saw my mum and dad working so hard, seven days a week around the clock — early mornings, late nights — and enduring people being insensitive. I remember it fully.’

Again, there is sadness evident on her face.

‘We lived above the shop and I saw them sweat it out. They made sacrifices and just worked hard — huge long hours,’ she says.

Priti worked hard, too. She attended an all-girls ethnically mixed comprehensive school where she became head girl before becoming the first in her family to graduate from university.

‘I don’t think I had an ambition growing up,’ she says.

‘I’m very close to my family. My dad taught me book-keeping. He used to show me the VAT returns. After his father passed away, I remember him telling me that if anything happened to him, it was my responsibility to keep a roof over my mum’s head and look after my brothers and sisters.’ 

Patel speaks about her experiences of racism during a speech in the Commons. She attended an all-girls ethnically mixed comprehensive school where she became head girl before becoming the first in her family to graduate from university

Patel speaks about her experiences of racism during a speech in the Commons. She attended an all-girls ethnically mixed comprehensive school where she became head girl before becoming the first in her family to graduate from university

She tells me she has one of each and her face softens when she speaks of her family, which includes her husband, Alex Sawyer, and their son.

She and Alex met through politics, working together on a by‑election campaign. They married in 2004 at a register office, followed by a Hindu ceremony.

‘My husband is a Christian but he’s not overtly religious,’ she says. ‘He doesn’t really see colour and never has done.

 ‘My parents taught me to get on with everyone. My dad — love him to bits — has always been one of those to integrate into society and become part of the community.

‘Before standing as an MP, I worked in consultancy for big multi-national companies. I don’t see barriers in people. That’s how we live our lives, that’s how we bring up our son.

‘My family are international. We don’t see colour, gender, race or stereotype. That is part of my motivation for becoming a Member of Parliament: I am not a stereotype. The Labour Party does not speak for me. I will not be defined by the Left because I am from an ethnic community.

‘I was born in this country. I was brought up in this country. I’ve had equal opportunities. I didn’t go to the most glamorous of schools, but I worked hard and went to university. That’s intrinsic to who I am.’

She pauses for a moment, then shakes her head. ‘Do you know my first experience of sexism and racism [since becoming an MP] has come now?’ she says.

‘That cartoon in The Guardian [depicting Priti as a cow and Boris Johnson as a bull when he defended her in the Commons] was beyond offensive from a cultural perspective. It’s no secret I’m a Hindu, so from a religious perspective it’s just offensive. It was awful — very, very upsetting.’

Her jaw tightens.

‘When I hear what I did in the Commons this week or read what I read in that letter, I fear we are returning to some of the most ugly and divisive aspects of hateful politics.

‘But I will not be silenced.’

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2020-06-12 23:04:27Z
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Coronavirus: Public urged to follow government advice during warm weekend - Sky News

The transport secretary has urged the public not to "throw this away" by ignoring lockdown advice as warm weather is expected over the weekend.

Grant Shapps also urged people not to attend "mass gatherings" after a week of Black Lives Matter protests across the UK.

Mr Shapps issued the advice at the government's daily coronavirus briefing, as he warned ignoring lockdown and social distancing guidance could lead to a second spike in deaths and cases.

He spoke after it was confirmed another 202 people had died after testing positive for COVID-19 in the UK.

Mr Shapps said at the daily briefing: "I've stood here at other times when we've been reporting deaths in the many hundreds and infections in the many thousands.

"We are reaching a point now where those numbers have come down.

"But is absolutely essential that we don't throw this away. It's going to be another warm weekend. Its very important people follow this advice because we do not want to be going backwards or facing a second spike."

More from UK

Mr Shapps also reminded the public that wearing face coverings in public transport is mandatory from Monday, with those who ignore the rule facing a fine.

He added that the public must not forget this "insidious virus is still a threat" as crowds were seen at an anti-racism demonstration in Trafalgar Square on Friday.

Black Lives Matter protesters carried out an anti-racism demonstration in London on Friday
Image: Protesters have been warned to stay at home over the weekend

The transport secretary continued: "That not only means avoiding public transport if you can. It also means from Monday, wearing a face covering on public transport, avoiding gatherings of more than six people, including to protest.

"I understand that people want to show passion for issues they care deeply about, but we must never be complacent about stamping racism and discrimination in this country.

"But please for the sake of your health and that of your friends and families, don't attend mass gatherings."

Black Lives Matter protesters gathered in Trafalgar Square on Friday
Image: Black Lives Matter protesters gathered in Trafalgar Square on Friday

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Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has urged people not attend demonstrations over the weekend amid fears far-right counter-demonstrations could lead to disorder.

Mr Khan said: "I'm extremely concerned that further protests in central London not only risk spreading COVID-19, but could lead to disorder, vandalism and violence.

"Extreme far-right groups who advocate hatred and division are planning counter-protests, which means that the risk of disorder is high."

Black Lives Matter organisers have cancelled a protest in London's Hyde Park over fears it would be targeted by far-right groups.

The protests were sparked after unarmed black man George Floyd was killed when a police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes in Minneapolis on 25 May.

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2020-06-12 20:01:35Z
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PM calls boarding up of Winston Churchill statue 'shameful' - Sky News

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. PM calls boarding up of Winston Churchill statue 'shameful'  Sky News
  2. Protests threat to Churchill statue shameful, says Boris Johnson  BBC News
  3. Boris Johnson: we should not support BLM protests 'likely to end in violence'  Guardian News
  4. Boris Johnson news – live: PM says ‘absurd and shameful’ Churchill statue is being protected as government makes Brexit U-turn on full border checks  The Independent
  5. Winston Churchill's grandson: 'Britain has lost its compass'  Telegraph.co.uk
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-12 18:53:40Z
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Grant Shapps declares with ‘absolute CERTAINTY’ UK will not delay Brexit transition - Express

The Transport Secretary told the coronavirus daily briefing he is certain the UK will not be extending the Brexit transition period. Mr Shapps reiterated that Britain has left the European Union and that the transition period will end in December 2020.

Mr Shapps said: "We leave the transition period at the end of the year and it is this Government's judgment that the best possible thing we can do for business is to provide it with absolute certainty that we will not be stretching out or extending the transition period in any way, shape or form.

"That is absolutely the case, the transition period will end at the end of this year."

Mr Shapps added: "As an independent coastal nation we're here to represent the interests of businesses and the population in the UK and we'll make sure that we do that.

"I think by saying now that we'll have the border... what we'll be doing on the border, in other words that we'll be sensible about the way that we introduce this, makes perfect sense."

READ MORE: Brexit bombshell: Chance of no deal 'higher than ever'

He added that "We're absolutely confident that we'll have great systems in place, there's no reason not to, this country will have the ability to do all those things.

"But we will do those things on our own terms."

In June 2016 the UK voted to leave the European Union.

The UK officially left the European Union at the end of January this year.

The Conservative MP said: "Mr Barnier is full of bluster and threats.

"We have the cards, we are a sovereign nation and we have our fishing waters.

"At this point the EU fishing vessels are able to fish in our waters but that doesn’t have to continue if we can’t get on with a sensible deal.

"In my Grimsby words, Mr Barnier needs to wind his neck in and get on with some sensible negotiations."

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2020-06-12 18:04:22Z
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People could be fined for not wearing face coverings on public transport - Metro.co.uk

Face covering
Face masks will be compulsory on public transport from Monday (Picture: PA/Getty)

Fines could be issued to people who do not wear face coverings on public transport.

Transport secretary Grant Shapps confirmed penalties could be given to people who do not cover their faces when on buses, trains, trams and planes from Monday.

‘I know there is huge public support for face coverings, they show respect for our fellow travellers,’ he said during the daily coronavirus press conference from Downing Street.

Shapps added: ‘But for clarity transport operators  will be able to refuse permission to travel where someone isn’t using a face covering and this weekend I am taking powers through the Public Health act leading to fines for non-compliance too. 

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‘We will take a gentle approach to enforcement during the first couple of days and help will be at hand.’

Visit our live blog for the latest updates: Coronavirus news live

Shapps said special journey makers would be deployed to assist and remind commuters of the need to wear face coverings.

He said there would also be campaigns on social media, at bus stops and rail stations to remind people of the new rule.

He added:’Remembering your face covering should be the same as picking up your wallet or phone or purse when you leave the house

‘Please read the guidance, ensure you have a face covering and protect your fellow commuters’.

Commuters wear facemasks as they travel on the London Underground in London on June 12, 2020 as lockdown measures are eased during the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
The new face-covering rule starts next week (Picture: Getty)

Another 202 people have died from coronavirus in the UK, bringing the nation’s official death toll to 41,481.

The latest figures from the department of health include deaths from all settings, including hospitals and care homes. 

The number of people who have tested positive for Covid-19 now stands at 292,950.

As of 9am 12 June, there have been 6,434,713 tests, 193,253 of which were carried out yesterday. 

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk. For more stories like this, check our news page.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiUWh0dHBzOi8vbWV0cm8uY28udWsvMjAyMC8wNi8xMi9maW5lcy1ub3Qtd2VhcmluZy1tYXNrcy1wdWJsaWMtdHJhbnNwb3J0LTEyODQ1MjI0L9IBVWh0dHBzOi8vbWV0cm8uY28udWsvMjAyMC8wNi8xMi9maW5lcy1ub3Qtd2VhcmluZy1tYXNrcy1wdWJsaWMtdHJhbnNwb3J0LTEyODQ1MjI0L2FtcC8?oc=5

2020-06-12 17:17:38Z
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Boris Johnson: People 'should not go' to anti-racism demonstrations - The Independent

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  1. Boris Johnson: People 'should not go' to anti-racism demonstrations  The Independent
  2. Protests threat to Churchill statue shameful, says Boris Johnson  BBC News
  3. Boris Johnson: we should not support BLM protests 'likely to end in violence'  Guardian News
  4. Boris Johnson says attacking statues is ‘lying about our history’ and protests have been ‘hijacked by extremists’  The Independent
  5. PM says police are arresting hundreds of yobs who've attacked cops & vandalised statues at protests  The Sun
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-12 16:52:44Z
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