Senin, 13 Juli 2020

PM says face masks ‘should be worn’ in shops - BBC News

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Boris Johnson has said people in England "should be wearing" face masks or other coverings inside shops to help prevent the spread of coronavirus.

The prime minister said the government would decide in the next few days if "tools of enforcement" were needed.

The comments follow cabinet minister Michael Gove telling the BBC on Sunday that face coverings should not become mandatory in shops in England.

Labour accused the government of having "a lack of clarity" on the issue.

Currently, face coverings are compulsory on public transport in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland - and the Welsh government has announced it will enforce the same measure from 27 July.

In Scotland, coverings are also mandatory in shops, but critics have complained that the situation in England needs to be made easier for the public to understand.

Visiting ambulance staff in central London, Mr Johnson, whose government controls health policy in England but not the rest of the UK, said: "I think people should be wearing [face masks] in shops.

"And, in terms of how we do that whether we make it mandatory or not, we'll be looking at the guidance - we'll be seeing a little bit more in the next few days."

Mr Johnson added: "Throughout this crisis people have shown amazing sensitivity towards other people and understanding of the needs to get the virus down by doing things cooperatively.

"Wearing masks is one of them... It's a mutual thing; people do see the value of it. We'll be looking in the next few days about exactly how - with what tools of enforcement - we think we want to make progress."

Analysis by Helen Catt, political correspondent

The signs seem to point towards the government making face masks compulsory in more places in England, but ministers appear reluctant to commit just yet.

Michael Gove's preference for trying to encourage people to take action voluntarily - rather than through fear of enforcement - is one we've seen the government repeat throughout the pandemic.

But the risk that comes with it is of mixed messaging. Earlier, when coronavirus was more widespread, it said the scientific evidence for mask-wearing was not clear enough. Now, it says, the evidence is stronger.

Of course, the scientific understanding of the virus is constantly developing, and so policy is likely to as well.

If the government does now think masks are the way forward though, communicating that message without confusion is going to be key.

Face coverings are worn to help prevent wearers spreading coronavirus, rather than catching it.

The prime minister said on Friday: "I do think we need to be stricter in insisting people wear face coverings in confined spaces where they are meeting people they don't normally meet."

But on Sunday, Cabinet Office minister Mr Gove told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show he did not think wearing masks in shops in England should be compulsory, adding that he would "encourage" them to do so "where they are likely to be mixing with others and where the ventilation may not be as good as it might".

He added: "I think that it is basic good manners, courtesy and consideration, to wear a face mask if you are, for example, in a shop."

Asked on BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Monday whether he was in the "mandatory perhaps" or "mandatory never" camp, Justice Secretary Robert Buckland said: "I think I'm 'mandatory perhaps'.

"Wearing them in an enclosed space where you've got lots of people, for example a busy shop, seems to be sensible."

Speaking on BBC One's Breakfast Mr Buckland said Mr Gove had not been "saying that people should not wear masks or take any mitigating actions at all. It's clearly the case that wearing a mask is an act of altruism.

"It doesn't actually protect you from the disease, but it prevents inadvertent transmission by the wearer to somebody else."

He said he wore them himself when visiting small shops, and it was "very sensible" to do so in supermarkets at busy times.

Labour's shadow business minister Lucy Powell told the BBC News Channel: "We need clarity of message, so that people understand what's expected of them. When that's going to happen?"

She also asked whether the prime minister was "talking about a legal obligation" or "a culture change".

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2020-07-13 11:37:30Z
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Care workers do not qualify for health visa in new post-Brexit immigration plans - Sky News

Social care workers do not qualify for the government's new health and care visa under the UK's post-Brexit immigration system, Downing Street has confirmed.

Home Secretary Priti Patel has unveiled details of how the UK's new points-based system will operate when it comes into effect on 1 January next year, after EU freedom of movement rules end.

A health and care visa will provide a route for key health professionals to work in the UK.

However, this will not include social care workers, Number 10 said.

"We want employers to invest more in training and development for care workers in this country," said the prime minister's official spokesman.

"On care workers specifically, our independent migration advisers have said that immigration is not the sole answer here, which is why we have provided councils with an additional £1.5bn of funding for social care in 2021-22, as well as launching a new recruitment campaign."

Existing EU workers in the care sector could apply to stay in the UK through the settlement scheme "and a very large number have done so", the spokesman added.

"Those people will remain in the UK providing really important care to the elderly and the vulnerable."

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2020-07-13 11:35:48Z
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Foreign criminals jailed for over a year will be BANNED from Britain under tough new immigration rules - The Sun

FOREIGN criminals jailed for over a year will be barred from Britain under tough new immigration rules.

Home Secretary Priti Patel announced the beefed-up measures for Border Force and immigration officials today.

Priti Patel will announce a ban on foreign crims sentenced to more than a year in jail

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Priti Patel will announce a ban on foreign crims sentenced to more than a year in jailCredit: Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

In a new 130-page document, the Government revealed even criminals not sentenced to 12 months face being booted out of Britain.

It said: "Those already in the UK who are sentenced to 12 months or more in prison must be considered for deportation.

"Where the 12-month criminality deportation threshold is not
met, a foreign criminal will still be considered for deportation where it is conducive to the public good, including where they have serious or persistent criminality."

This includes persistent offenders such as pickpockets and burglars.

The document also warns those coming here they will have to follow the rules or face the consequences.

It says: “Migrants are expected to observe the conditions of their permitted stay and not to remain beyond the period of their lawful status. 

“Those who breach our immigration laws and rules place themselves at risk of exploitation by unscrupulous bodies such as organised crime groups and rogue employers and landlords.”

The change means criminals from the European Union are treated the same as currently happens to those from non-EU countries.

Under the present rules, convicted former lags from the bloc can only be excluded on a case-by-case basis.

Border Force and Immigration officials will be able to block the entry of those migrants found guilty of serious crimes in a migration crackdown.

Activists in London protest the new immigration bill the government has prepared, June 29

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Activists in London protest the new immigration bill the government has prepared, June 29Credit: Getty Images - Getty

This new criminality rule will affect anyone wanting to enter Britain who is deemed "not conducive to the public good.

The clause could thus allow ministers to snub hate preachers or other people hoping to settle in the country, but plan to stir up social tensions, the paper adds.

The crackdown is part of a raft of new immigration rules - a points-based system which will replace freedom of movement from January 1.

The new immigration system is designed to cut the number of low-skilled migrants entering Britain from the beginning of next year.

But it aims to make it easier for higher-skilled workers to get UK visas.

People who want to live and work here will need to gain 70 points to be eligible to apply for a visa.

Nick Thomas-Symonds says the changes will be examined

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Nick Thomas-Symonds says the changes will be examinedCredit: Twitter
Priti Patel says former lags are not welcome

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Priti Patel says former lags are not welcomeCredit: PA:Press Association

Points will be awarded for key requirements like being able to speak English to a certain level, having a job offer from an approved employer, and meeting a minimum salary threshold.

A health and care visa will provide a route for key health professionals to work in the UK, while a graduate route will allow international students to stay in the UK for at least two years after completing their studies.

Ms Patel said on Sunday: "The British people voted to take back control of our borders and introduce a new points-based immigration system.

"Now we have left the EU, we are free to unleash this country's full potential."

She said this would allow the government to, "implement changes we need to restore trust in the immigration system and deliver a new fairer, firmer, skills-led system from 1 January 2021."

Shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds said Labour would "scrutinise the proposals on visas very carefully".

"The Government has rushed through immigration legislation with very little detail in the middle of a global pandemic.

"There are real concerns that this will cause major problems for our NHS and our care sector."

Thomas-Symonds added that the changes came at a "time when we are still waiting for the Government to make good on their promise to scrap the unfair immigration health surcharge for workers who were being charged to access the very services they were keeping going to help others during the toughest of times."

The changes will result in beefed-up powers for border officials

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The changes will result in beefed-up powers for border officials Credit: Alamy
Priti Patel urges people to go to pubs as jobs are at stake but be sensible and keep your distance

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2020-07-13 10:00:00Z
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Coronavirus POLL: Should face coverings be compulsory in shops? VOTE - Express

Face coverings are compulsory in Scottish shops, but shoppers currently do not have to wear them in stores in England, Wales or Northern Ireland. Last week Prime Minister Boris Johnson hinted that they could soon be made mandatory in shops as he was pictured wearing one in public for the first time on Friday.

But this was contradicted by Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove, who said face masks should not be made mandatory in shops but should be worn out of courtesy and consideration for others.

Express.co.uk is asking you should face coverings be compulsory in shops?

During a Q&A session with voters on social media, Mr Johnson hinted mask wearing in shops would soon be made mandatory.

He said: “As we get the virus down, in the way that we have, and we stamp out local outbreaks in the way that we are, I do think we need to be stricter in insisting that people wear face coverings in confined places.

“We’re looking at ways of making sure that people really do have face coverings, in shops, for example.”

But on Sunday, Mr Gove said face coverings should not be made mandatory in shops in England, but he would encourage people to wear them.

Mr Gove told the BBC: "I don't think mandatory, no, but I would encourage people to wear face masks when they are inside, in an environment where they are likely to be mixing with others and where the ventilation may not be as good as it might.

READ MORE: Coronavirus map LIVE: 100 local lockdowns a week in UK after outbreaks

"I think that it is basic good manners, courtesy and consideration, to wear a face mask if you are, for example, in a shop.

"I trust people's good sense. Now of course the Government at all times does look at the emerging evidence about what the best way to control the disease is.

"If necessary, and if tough measures are required and as we have seen in Leicester, obviously a very different situation, then tough measures will be taken.

 

"But on the whole... it is always best to trust people's common sense."

Mr Gove said that wearing a face covering "definitely helps you to help others in enclosed space".

"Face masks are appropriate in some settings and not in others... wearing a face mask when you are out and about outdoors is significantly less necessary than when you are indoors."

Downing Street has faced questions about why more Cabinet ministers are not wearing face coverings after new figures suggested the majority of Britons are covering up while in public.

Fresh data from the Office for National Statistics indicated that 52 percent of adults in Britain had worn a face covering when leaving their home in the final week of June, up from 43 percent on the week before.

Regardless of whether they had worn a face covering previously, 58 percent of the 1,788 adults quizzed between July 2-5 said they were very or fairly likely to wear one in the next seven days.

The level of usage provoked further questions for Number 10 about why so few of the Government's leading figures had been spotted wearing a face covering.

Mr Johnson was only spotted wearing a surgical mask in public for the first time on Friday, while Chancellor Rishi Sunak was pictured serving food to customers at a Wagamama restaurant in central London without a covering.

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2020-07-13 08:07:00Z
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Boris Johnson and Michael Gove clash over face masks in shops - Daily Mail

Ministers are 'all over the place' on face masks: Scientists slam 'confused' advice as Boris Johnson and Michael Gove appear at odds on over whether they should be compulsory in shops

  • Boris Johnson had hinted the face mask requirement could be extended to shops
  • But Michael Gove sparked confusion over official policy on the issue yesterday 
  • Scientists have warned that the British public will be 'confused' over the advice 

Ministers are 'all over the place' on face masks with Boris Johnson and Michael Gove seemingly at odds over whether they should be compulsory.  

Scientists have warned that the public will be 'confused' after the Cabinet minister insisted wearing covering indoors should be a matter of 'courtesy'.

Mr Gove's intervention came despite Boris Johnson saying on Friday that the government 'needs to be stricter in insisting people wear face coverings in confined spaces'. 

Downing Street sources tried to play down the clash, saying that masks could still be made mandatory in shops in England in the coming weeks. Currently they are only required by law on public transport.

Nicola Sturgeon has already brought the rule in for Scotland, while London mayor Sadiq Khan has been demanding the change.

Royal Society president Dr Venki Ramakrishnan said the 'evidence has shifted' and it was now 'quite strongly in favour of using face coverings in enclosed spaces'. 

He told GMB it was 'not consistent' to require masks on public transport but not in shops. 'A virus doens't know. The bahviour of the virus is the same in all of these spaces,' he said.

Boris Johnson appeared in public wearing a face mask for the first time on Friday night, hours after suggesting the Government would become 'stricter in insisting that people wear face coverings in confined places'

Michael Gove sparked confusion yesterday by insisting wearing face covering indoors should be a matter of 'courtesy' rather than required by law

Michael Gove sparked confusion yesterday by insisting wearing face covering indoors should be a matter of 'courtesy' rather than required by law

Paul Hunter, a professor of medicine at the University of East Anglia, said the public 'had been confused as hell' by some official advice during the crisis. 

'I think we're seeing this again with facemasks,' he told the Times.  

A former Cabinet minister said the approach was 'all over the place'. 'If the government wants to be clear about this, they should go one way or the other. Sitting on the fence doesn't really work. People are confused,' they said. 

Government sources said ten factory production lines have been acquired to ensure there is enough supply if and when the wider use of coverings is made mandatory.

Half of the businesses, in Wales and Burnley, are already in production with the rest to come on stream next week. 

Sources said the move was to make the UK 'resilient' and not reliant on foreign suppliers.

Masks are already compulsory on public transport and the Prime Minister hinted on Friday that the Government is poised to extend the requirement to retail premises to help control the virus spread.

Mr Gove sparked confusion over official policy on the issue yesterday when he said it should not be made mandatory in shops. 

Mr Johnson appeared in public wearing a face mask for the first time on Friday night, hours after suggesting the Government would become 'stricter in insisting that people wear face coverings in confined places'.

Masks are already compulsory on public transport and the Prime Minister hinted on Friday that the Government is poised to extend the requirement to retail premises to help control the virus spread

Masks are already compulsory on public transport and the Prime Minister hinted on Friday that the Government is poised to extend the requirement to retail premises to help control the virus spread

But asked if Downing Street was going to make their use mandatory in shops, Mr Gove told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show yesterday: 'I don't think mandatory, no. But I would encourage people to wear face masks when they're inside in an environment where they're likely to be mixing with others and where the ventilation may not be as good as it might. 

'So I think that it is basic good manners, courtesy, consideration to wear a face mask if you are, for example, in a shop.'

A Government source said: 'Michael was clear that the situation is under review and that is the position. The PM's comments still stand.'

London mayor Sadiq Khan, who is campaigning for compulsory mask use, urged ministers to 'get their act together'. 

He said: 'Our response is once again behind the rest of the world.'  

Tory MP Sir Christopher Chope urged ministers not to make masks compulsory, saying he would stop shopping if required to wear one

Tory MP Sir Christopher Chope urged ministers not to make masks compulsory, saying he would stop shopping if required to wear one

A Whitehall source said the Government had now acquired ten production lines, each capable of producing half a million masks per week.

Five are already operating, with the rest expected to complete safety tests within days.

But Tory MP Sir Christopher Chope urged ministers not to make masks compulsory, saying he would stop shopping if required to wear one. 

He said ministers should keep things in perspective and be 'trying to build confidence about the nature of the risk involved'.

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2020-07-13 07:13:45Z
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Priti Patel to set out post-Brexit immigration details - BBC News

Britain is "ready to welcome the best and the brightest global talent", Home Secretary Priti Patel has said, as she prepares to unveil more details of her post-Brexit immigration plan.

The new system is set to come into force on New Year's Day, immediately ending freedom of movement with the EU.

The government wants to bring in a "points-based" immigration system which would reward high-skilled workers.

Labour said it could cause "major problems" for the NHS and care sector.

Under the government's plan, those wishing to live and work in the UK must gain 70 points.

Points would be awarded for criteria such as having a job offer, holding a PhD relevant to the job, speaking English and earning more than £22,000.

Those with job offers in "shortage occupations" such as nursing and civil engineering would also be able to earn extra points.

The government will also introduce a health and care visa for health sector workers coming to the UK, while international students will be able to stay in the country for a minimum of two years after finishing their studies.

Ms Patel said: "The British people voted to take back control of our borders and introduce a new points-based immigration system.

"Now we have left the EU, we are free to unleash this country's full potential and implement the changes we need to restore trust in the immigration system and deliver a new fairer, firmer, skills-led system from 1 January 2021."

Labour shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds said: "We will scrutinise the proposals on visas very carefully. The government has rushed through immigration legislation with very little detail in the middle of a global pandemic.

"There are real concerns that this will cause major problems for our NHS and our care sector, at a time when we are still waiting for the government to make good on their promise to scrap the unfair immigration health surcharge for workers who were being charged to access the very services they were keeping going to help others during the toughest of times."

On Sunday Ms Patel announced the UK and France had signed a deal on immigration and border management to establish a joint intelligence unit to "crack down on the gangs behind this vile people-smuggling operation".

Speaking after a visit to Calais, she said: "Despite all of the action taken by law enforcement to date - intercepting the boats, making arrests, returning people to France and putting the criminals responsible behind bars - the numbers continue to increase."

Her visit came as the government announced a £705m funding package to help manage Britain's borders when the UK leaves the EU customs union at the end of the year.

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2020-07-13 03:52:06Z
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Minggu, 12 Juli 2020

Coronavirus lockdown rules continue to ease in England, Scotland and Wales - Sky News

Lockdown rules continue to be eased in England, Scotland and Wales as the three nations continue the long journey back to normal life.

The latest changes include:

  • England: Beauty salons, nail bars and tattoo parlours are allowed to open, as are spas, massage studios and physical therapy businesses. But government guidance says face waxing, eyelash treatments, make-up application and facials should not go ahead because of the risk of COVID-19 transmission
  • Scotland: Hospitals can reopen to visitors for patients who do not have coronavirus, children can play contact sports outdoors, shopping centres will reopen and non-aerosol routine dental care returns
  • Wales: Some pubs, bars and restaurants will be opening outdoors, as well as most indoor attractions

It comes after around 200 workers were quarantined and 73 employees tested positive for the virus at AS Green and Co farm in the village of Mathon near Worcester.

The workers are having to remain on the farm for isolation and the council is arranging delivery of food and supplies.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said there were more than 100 "local actions" across the country each week aimed at preventing similar outbreaks.

He told The Daily Telegraph that "some of these will make the news, but many more are swiftly and silently dealt with".

Leicester remains in local lockdown
Image: Leicester remains in local lockdown after a recent increase in cases

Leicester remains in lockdown after a rise in cases there and Mr Hancock said this would be reviewed later this week.

More from Covid-19

Meanwhile, there is still debate in England on whether face coverings should be compulsory in shops as they are on public transport.

On Friday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson had said he wanted to be "stricter" on getting people to wear them but cabinet officer Michael Gove said on Sunday that they should not be made compulsory.

Mr Gove told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show that it was "basic good manners, courtesy and consideration" to wear a face covering in a shop but added: "I trust people's good sense".

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He has also encouraged people to return to work from today, reversing previous messages which urged people to work from home if possible to limit the spread of the virus.

In Scotland, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced a move to phase three of a four-step process to end lockdown.

She also warned that she will impose quarantine on English visitors to Scotland if necessary, but she added that it will not be a decision she takes lightly.

The Department of Health and Social Care said 44,819 people have died in UK hospitals, care homes and the community after testing positive for coronavirus by 5pm on Saturday.

The number of UK deaths involving COVID-19 is thought to have passed 55,000.

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2020-07-13 03:38:50Z
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