Minggu, 29 November 2020

COVID-19: Santa's grottos and carol singing allowed in new Christmas guidance - Sky News

Santa's grottos, nativity plays and door-to-door carol singing will be permitted once lockdown ends, according to new Christmas guidance.

New government advice says grottos will be allowed in all tiers if they are in venues that can open - but social distancing must be in place.

Door-to-door carol singing is also allowed when lockdown is lifted in England on Wednesday, and those performing or rehearsing do not have to adhere to gathering limits.

People in all tiers will also be able to attend places of worship, but the rules on who you can meet there will depend on your tier.

The advice on visiting shops varies across the tiers
Image: The advice on visiting shops varies across the tiers

Performances by pupils, such as nativity plays and other seasonal events, can take place within existing school bubbles but should avoid mixing across groups.

From 23 to 27 December, people can form a Christmas bubble if necessary in order to see family and friends, with travel to other parts of the country also permitted during this time.

Earlier this week, Conservative MP Andrew Selous told the Commons that churches and cathedrals can now approach Advent and Christmas with certainty.

More from Covid-19

He said: "Clergy have already demonstrated that they've made their buildings COVID-secure and many cathedrals and churches are planning to have multiple services to accommodate more people as less are allowed in each service.

On carol singing rules, he said: "The further good news is that while indoor singing is limited to performers only, we can all take part in outdoor and door-to-door singing, staying two metres apart or away from the threshold, and nativity plays for under-18s are permitted in accordance with the performing arts guidance."

Meanwhile, rules surrounding visiting shops and Christmas markets vary across the tiers, with the government urging people to check the rules in their areas for indoor and open-air shops, as well as Christmas tree markets.

The Christmas guidance states that rules will be back in place by New Year's Eve, with the government reinforcing that Christmas bubbles will no longer apply.

The guidance adds that the rules on who people can meet with in bars, pubs and restaurant will also vary across tiers, and those rules will not change between 23 and 27 December.

The new guidance comes after the government's scientific advisers warned that the relaxation of coronavirus restrictions over Christmas will increase infections "potentially by a large amount".

The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) said the prevalence of COVID-19 "could easily double" over the festive period with "substantial mixing" of people.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMib2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2NvdmlkLTE5LXNhbnRhcy1ncm90dG9zLWFuZC1jYXJvbC1zaW5naW5nLWFsbG93ZWQtaW4tbmV3LWNocmlzdG1hcy1ndWlkYW5jZS0xMjE0NjUxMNIBc2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9jb3ZpZC0xOS1zYW50YXMtZ3JvdHRvcy1hbmQtY2Fyb2wtc2luZ2luZy1hbGxvd2VkLWluLW5ldy1jaHJpc3RtYXMtZ3VpZGFuY2UtMTIxNDY1MTA?oc=5

2020-11-29 21:52:45Z
52781214641585

Government issues new Christmas guidance as UK records another 215 deaths - Express

The new Christmas advice says Santa's grottos will be allowed to open in all tiers if they are in venues that can open. However it is clear that social distancing must be in place. Door-to-door carol singing will also be allowed. But people who are performing or rehearsing have been warned they can do this a professional capacity or as part of a supervised activity for under 18s.

People in all three tiers will be allowed to attend places of worship.

And travel is allowed to other parts of the country between December 23 and 27 to meet with other households in your Christmas bubble.

Depending on where people are in the UK, shopping and visiting Christmas markets will also depend.

There may be different rules for indoor shops and open air shops or Christmas tree markets. 

It comes after the Government said a further 215 people had died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19 as of Sunday.

This has brought the UK total to 58,245.

Separate figures published by the UK's statistics agencies for deaths where Covid-19 has been mentioned on the death certificate, together with additional data on deaths that have occurred in recent days, show there have now been 73,000 deaths involving Covid-19 in the UK.

The Government said that, as of 9am on Sunday, there had been a further 12,155 lab-confirmed cases of coronavirus in the UK.

READ MORE: Christmas scam warning: How to shield against ‘festive fraud’ 

Mr Raab insisted the restrictions - which will place swathes of England under stringent rules - are necessary to "bear down" on the pandemic and keep the country out of a national lockdown.

But he said tiers would be downgraded in areas where the virus is in retreat, telling Sky's Sophy Ridge On Sunday: "We are starting with a more restrictive approach than previously with the localised approach.

"But that allows us to ease up when we are confident the virus is going down and stabilised - there's a review every two weeks."

Mr Raab said that, with testing, "those two things are the crucial bridge to that light at the end of the tunnel in the spring".

And in an interview with BBC One's The Andrew Marr Show, he said there was a "risk" of a third spike in case numbers "if we don't get the balance right".

Asked whether there would be another national lockdown if people fail to comply with the rules, Mr Raab said: "We're doing everything we can to avoid that."

His comments came after Boris Johnson wrote to Conservative MPs offering them another chance to vote on the restrictions early next year, saying the legislation will have a "sunset of February 3".

In a bid to head off a rebellion, the Prime Minister also said that at the first review of the measures on December 16 he would move areas down a tier where there is "robust evidence" that coronavirus is in sustained decline.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiggFodHRwczovL3d3dy5leHByZXNzLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvdWsvMTM2NjE3MS9DaHJpc3RtYXMtY29yb25hdmlydXMtZ3VpZGFuY2UtVUstZGVhdGhzLWxhdGVzdC1ib3Jpcy1qb2huc29uLXRpZXItcmVzdHJpY3Rpb25zLWxvY2tkb3du0gGGAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmV4cHJlc3MuY28udWsvbmV3cy91ay8xMzY2MTcxL0NocmlzdG1hcy1jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1ndWlkYW5jZS1VSy1kZWF0aHMtbGF0ZXN0LWJvcmlzLWpvaG5zb24tdGllci1yZXN0cmljdGlvbnMtbG9ja2Rvd24vYW1w?oc=5

2020-11-29 19:29:00Z
52781212068131

Covid: Risk of third wave 'if we don't get balance right' - Raab - BBC News

Two people wearing face masks by Christmas trees
PA Media

England could face a third wave of coronavirus if ministers do not "get the balance right" with restrictions, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab says.

He defended the move to a tiered approach when England's lockdown ends on Wednesday, saying the curbs are needed to "bear down" on the pandemic.

MPs will vote on the system on Tuesday, with Labour undecided on its stance.

The PM has told MPs the restrictions will expire on 3 February in a bid to stop a Commons rebellion.

In a letter to all MPs and peers, Boris Johnson said rules could be eased in December, MPs could vote again in January and the tier system could end in February.

But Labour's shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy said her party's support was "not unconditional" and they were seeking "clarity" about the tier system.

It comes as a further 12,155 people have tested positive for coronavirus, bringing the UK total to 1,617,327.

There have been another 215 deaths of people who had tested positive for the virus within the previous 28 days, the total under that measure now being 58,245.

  • Has England's lockdown worked?
  • Why is so much of the North and Midlands in the top tier?
  • Don't 'take brakes off' Covid measures - scientist

England's new system will see regions placed in one of three tiers: medium, high and very high.

In total, 99% of England will enter the highest two tiers, with tight restrictions on bars and restaurants and a ban on households mixing indoors. Only Cornwall, the Isle of Wight and Isles of Scilly will be in the lowest tier.

In Wales, First Minister Mark Drakeford said pubs, restaurants and bars will be subject to stricter restrictions - which are not yet finalised - in the run-up to Christmas. They will come into force from Friday, 4 December.

Presentational grey line
GRaphic

When asked whether there could be a third national lockdown, Mr Raab told the BBC's Andrew Marr the government was "doing everything we can to avoid that".

But he said there was a "risk" of a third wave "if we don't get the balance right".

He told Sky's Sophy Ridge on Sunday the tiers would be downgraded in areas where the virus was in retreat, saying: "We are starting with a more restrictive approach than previously with the localised approach.

"But that allows us to ease up when we are confident the virus is going down and stabilised - there's a review every two weeks."

Asked whether the government was looking at breaking counties into smaller areas for the tiers, given differences in rates of the virus within tier areas, Mr Raab said: "The problem is you've got to get the geographic size sufficiently effective that you don't find the smaller enclaves of lower level virus shooting up because they are not subject to the restrictions in the high levels around them."

Labour's Ms Nandy told the BBC's Andrew Marr her party "will act in the public interest".

"We need to know first of all that these measures are tough enough to get control of the virus, otherwise what we are asking businesses to do is go through significant pain, people laid off, some businesses at risk of collapsing, without being able to show that this is worth it," she said.

She added that there also needed to be "proper support" in place.

Meanwhile, in a bid to answer MPs' concerns, Mr Johnson wrote to them outlining a timeline of when - and how - the tiered approach will end.

In his letter, Mr Johnson said:

  • Regulations have a "sunset" clause - or expiry date - of 3 February
  • Tiers will be reviewed every two weeks, with the first review due on 16 December
  • At the end of January, MPs will have another vote on the tiered approach and decide whether measures stay in place until the end of March
  • The government will publish the circumstances that need to change for an area to move down a tier

In his letter to the public, the prime minister urged people to support the new system and "work together" with tiering, testing and vaccines.

He said: "We can't blow it now. We can't just throw it all away - not when freedom is in sight."

Presentational grey line

Analysis

By Ellie Price, political reporter, BBC News

'Tis the season to be jolly careful, said Boris Johnson last week. And he needs to be, with a potential rebellion of his own MPs to worry about.

His letter to all MPs is a change of tone from yesterday when Michael Gove warned it wasn't just ministers who had to take difficult decisions, but MPs too.

This morning, the foreign secretary went for the more reassuring approach and piled on the domestic diplomacy….

"We are listening", he said.

One Tory MP told me this morning that the letter was "nice" but he still hadn't decided how to vote.

Many Tory MPs are waiting for an impact assessment- looking at the economic, social and health effects of the tier system, due to be published on Monday.

So far, Labour haven't said they will support the measures, but they've never voted against Covid health restrictions in the past.

Presentational grey line
Map showing the new three tier system in England before and after lockdown

Writing in the Sunday Times, Conservative Damian Green, MP for Ashford in Kent - a tier 3 area - said he will vote against the restrictions on Tuesday.

He said that in Kent there was "an extraordinary divergence in Covid rates" and there was "no logic" in putting the whole county in the same tier.

"The new approach punishes rural areas next to large towns or cities and is bound to reduce public acceptance of these restrictions," he said.

Tory MP Steve Baker said he wanted to see the data the government was basing its new system on.

He tweeted that MPs were "glad to share in the burden of decision", but added: "That's why we need the information necessary to show the government's restrictions will do more good than harm, in full and in time."

Daily cases graphic
Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

But writing in the Sunday Times, Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England Jenny Harries warned: "If we relax our guard and the virus spreads too quickly then all the hard-won progress will be undone."

She said that once the lockdown ends in England "there is no other way to keep the virus under control", urging people to "hold on a little longer".

On Saturday, a further 479 deaths within 28 days of a positive test were reported in the UK, bringing the total to 58,030. There were also a further 15,871 positive cases registered in the past 24 hours.

Presentational white space
Around the BBC - Sounds
Around the BBC footer - Sounds

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiJGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy91ay01NTEyMjI2NtIBKGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy9hbXAvdWstNTUxMjIyNjY?oc=5

2020-11-29 17:09:00Z
52781212068131

Brexit: UK in 'last leg' of trade talks with EU, says Raab - BBC News

Dominic Raab
PA Media

The UK is in the "last leg of negotiations" with the EU over a post-Brexit trade deal, the foreign secretary has said.

Dominic Raab told the BBC it was likely the talks were entering the "last real major week", and an agreement remained possible if the EU showed "pragmatism".

He added that the talks now depended on resolving a "fairly narrow" set of issues, including fishing rights.

Negotiators are racing to reach a deal, with a looming deadline in four weeks.

Face-to-face discussions resumed in London over the weekend, after chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier left self-isolation following a colleague's positive Covid-19 test last week.

The two sides are trying to strike an agreement to govern their trading relationship after the UK's post-Brexit transition period ends on 31 December.

  • Barnier arrives in UK for face-to-face Brexit talks
  • What's happening with Brexit?
  • How close to a Brexit trade deal are we?

Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr programme, Mr Raab said: "We're down to really two basic issues, but I think in particular the issue around fisheries.

"I do think this is a very significant week, the last real major week, subject to any further postponement of the goalposts in terms of the timing."

He added that a deal was subject to the EU accepting the "point of principle" that the UK would require "control" over its fishing grounds after the transition.

"If the EU understand that point of principle and we have some pragmatism, we can get there," he said.

"We ought to be able on both sides to resolve fisheries, if you take the context of the wider economic gains and potential downsides of not having a further deal."

Speaking earlier to Sky's Sophy Ridge, he said the UK was prepared to "talk about transitions and things like that" on fishing rights, but the "point of principle" on control would have to be respected.

Michel Barnier in London
Reuters

Ahead of in-person negotiations resuming on Saturday, Mr Barnier said the "same significant divergences persist" between the two sides.

Negotiators had continued via video-link for the past week or so, after the positive Covid-19 test in a member of the EU negotiating team.

Alongside fishing, the Frenchman has for a while said post-Brexit competition rules and how any deal would be enforced remain the most difficult areas.

The two sides are continuing to haggle over how much access European fishing boats should have to British waters, and how much they would be allowed to catch from next year.

They are also at odds over how closely the UK should have to follow the EU's social, labour, and environmental standards after the transition.

Transition deadline looms

The UK left the EU on 31 January, but it is continuing to follow the bloc's rules until the end of the year as part of an 11-month transition period.

If a trade deal is not agreed by then, trading between the two will default to World Trade Organization rules.

The EU and UK can keep negotiating if they want to after this, but the two sides would face import taxes on goods traded between them.

The UK would have no access to the EU's energy market, and no agreement on police and judicial co-operation.

Labour stance

On Sunday, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said his party would decide whether to vote for or abstain on any deal reached, after examining the final agreement.

Speaking at an online conference for a party affiliate group, he said: "This is an important discussion within our party, and I'm obviously listening to a number of different views on it."

"I don't think there's really much of a case for voting against it, when that would effectively be to vote for no deal," he added.

Last month the UK's chief negotiator Lord David Frost said he assumed MPs would have to vote on a law to implement "at least some elements" of a deal.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiL2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU1MTIwODE00gEzaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU1MTIwODE0?oc=5

2020-11-29 15:49:00Z
CBMiL2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU1MTIwODE00gEzaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU1MTIwODE0

Covid hospital deaths drop by 8% as 229 new fatalities reported - Daily Mail

Plunge in Covid cases continues as lockdown nears end: UK records 12,155 infections - down 34% on last Sunday - as daily virus deaths drop 45% to 215

  • Figures are positive sign that England's second lockdown slowed infection rate 
  • Cases recorded today shaves more than third off 18,662 reported last Sunday
  • Official figures released today have also revealed 215 more coronavirus deaths 

The UK has recorded a further 12,155 coronavirus cases today, marking a 34 per cent drop on last Sunday's total.

In a positive sign that England's second nation-wide lockdown slowed the country's spiraling infection rate, the number of positive tests recorded today shaves more than a third off the 18,662 reported this time last week.

Official figures released today have also revealed 215 more coronavirus deaths - 46 per cent fewer than the 398 seen last Sunday. 

Today's figures come as Dominic Raab admitted there is a 'risk' of a third wave of coronavirus infections in the New Year if ministers 'don't get the balance right' on tiered restrictions. 

The UK has recorded a further 12,155 coronavirus cases today, marking a 34 per cent drop on last Sunday's total

The UK has recorded a further 12,155 coronavirus cases today, marking a 34 per cent drop on last Sunday's total

Official figures released today have also revealed 215 more coronavirus deaths - 46 per cent fewer than the 398 seen last Sunday

Official figures released today have also revealed 215 more coronavirus deaths - 46 per cent fewer than the 398 seen last Sunday

The Foreign Secretary said the Government is 'doing everything we can to avoid' a third national shutdown but failed to rule it out as he defended the decision to plunge the majority of the nation into the top two tiers of curbs from December 2. 

Mr Raab said the aim of the tiers is to enable England to 'come out of national lockdown and stay out of it' as he stressed areas will be able to move down to a lower tier if the virus is in retreat.

He said the tiered system, the roll out of vaccines and greater mass-testing in the coming months would provide a 'crucial bridge to that light at the end of the tunnel in the Spring'. 

The intervention came after Boris Johnson attempted to head off a Tory rebellion over the tier system. 

Parliament will vote on Tuesday on whether the new curbs should be rolled out from December 2 and the PM last night said there would be a further vote early next year on keeping the measures in place. 

He has also announced there will be a sunset clause of February 3 on the restrictions which means if MPs reject extending the measures they could end within nine weeks. 

Mr Johnson has also stressed that at the first review of the measures on December 16 he will move areas down a tier where there is 'robust evidence' that coronavirus is in sustained decline. The measures will then be reviewed every two weeks. 

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab today admitted there is a 'risk' of a third wave of coronavirus infections in the new year if ministers don't 'get the balance right' on restrictions

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab today admitted there is a 'risk' of a third wave of coronavirus infections in the new year if ministers don't 'get the balance right' on restrictions

Boris Johnson today urged Britain not to 'blow it' in the battle against Covid-19 by flouting the rules of his controversial new three-tier system of restrictions

Boris Johnson today urged Britain not to 'blow it' in the battle against Covid-19 by flouting the rules of his controversial new three-tier system of restrictions

Almost the entire nation is set to be banned from socialising indoors until Easter, officials admitted last night. The senior sources said it was 'unrealistic' to expect areas under the toughest curbs – Tiers 2 and 3 – to move down to Tier 1 before spring

Almost the entire nation is set to be banned from socialising indoors until Easter, officials admitted last night. The senior sources said it was 'unrealistic' to expect areas under the toughest curbs – Tiers 2 and 3 – to move down to Tier 1 before spring

Under a 'virtual lockdown' revealed on Thursday, 99 per cent of the population is set to be put in the top two tiers, which ban household gatherings and cripple the hospitality trade

Under a 'virtual lockdown' revealed on Thursday, 99 per cent of the population is set to be put in the top two tiers, which ban household gatherings and cripple the hospitality trade

Expert warns Boris Johnson it would be a 'terrible mistake' to ease curbs too quickly

One of the Government's scientific experts has warned Boris Johnson it would be a 'terrible mistake' to ease coronavirus curbs too quickly ahead of the roll out of vaccines. 

Boris Johnson has said that at the first review of the new tier restrictions in mid-December he will move areas down a level where there is 'robust evidence' that coronavirus is in sustained decline.

But Professor Peter Openshaw of Imperial College London, a member of the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (Nervtag), urged the PM to adopt a cautious approach to lifting rules. 

He told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show: 'We scientists are very concerned indeed about relaxation of precautions at this stage. The rates are still too high, there's too many cases coming into hospitals, too many people dying.

'And if we take the brakes off at this stage, just when the end is in sight, I think we would be making a huge mistake.

'We've all sacrificed so much, everyone has sacrificed enormously in order to get the transmission rate down. With only a few months to go until vaccines start to have an effect I think it would just be a terrible mistake.

'I think we must keep this under control and just behave very, very sensibly. It's extremely difficult to get this right and I don't envy the politicians.' 

Advertisement

Mr Johnson wrote to Tory MPs on Saturday night as he tried to assuage their fears amid reports as many as 100 Conservative backbenchers could revolt.  

He has urged people to stick with the curbs, warning against trying to 'jump the fence now' in a bid to reach 'the sunlit upland pastures ahead'.

In an allusion to the war film The Great Escape, dramatising attempts to flee a German prisoner-of-war camp, Mr Johnson said that if we do 'we will simply tangle ourselves in the last barbed wire, with disastrous consequences for the NHS'.

With the mass rollout of the first coronavirus vaccines now expected to start within weeks, Mr Johnson deployed a reference to another war, as he wrote in the Mail on Sunday: 'We will inevitably win, because the armies of science are coming to our aid with all the morale-boosting bugle-blasting excitement of Wellington's Prussian allies coming through the woods on the afternoon of Waterloo'.

Labour is expected to back the Government's tiered system at Tuesday's vote which means the rules are almost certain to clear the House of Commons even if there is a massive Conservative rebellion. 

However, shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy has warned her party's support is 'not unconditional'.

Mr Raab defended the plans this morning, telling Sophy Ridge on Sky News: 'The reality is we want to come out of national lockdown and stay out of it.

'There is hope, there is light at the end of the tunnel with the prospect, subject to regulatory approval, of the vaccine being ready to be in place and distributed by the Spring which will allow a real step change back to life resembling normal.

'The two things we need between now and then, this tiered approach so that we can target the virus where it is the most dangerous, we are starting with a more restrictive approach than previously with a localised approach, but that allows us to ease up when we are confident the virus is going down and stabilises. There is a review every two weeks.

'The second thing is just the testing and what we have seen, we have had 12 million people tested and we have seen in Liverpool with community wide testing at-scale done more quickly, that really helps us bear down on the virus.

'Those two things are the crucial bridge to that light at the end of the tunnel in the Spring.'

However, Mr Raab conceded that if the tiers do not work and infection rates increase then there could be a third wave of infections in January and February. 

He told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show: 'Well, there is a risk of that if we don't get the balance right but so far the R level is coming down, that is really important, and that is why we are starting with the tiered approach, more restrictive than some people would like than previously, but that allows us to ease up.'

Mr Raab said ministers are 'doing everything we can to avoid' a third national lockdown and people are 'getting well ahead' by talking about a potential third wave given that the second national lockdown is yet to end. 

The Foreign Secretary was asked whether the areas being placed into each tier could be split up - so-called 'decoupling' - so that urban centres with high infection rates do not drag down more rural areas in the same county which have low infection rates. 

Mr Raab said: 'We will have a review every two weeks and of course there will be I am sure debate this week on it.

'We always look at all things but the problem is… that you have got to get the geographic size sufficiently effective that you don't find if you like the smaller enclaves of lower level virus shifting up because they are not subject to the restrictions in the higher level areas around them.'

Mr Raab said he hoped vaccines, mass-testing and the tiers system will result in the UK making it to 'a whole different world' by the Spring.

Ms Nandy said Labour was seeking 'clarity' about the Government's new tier system ahead of this week's vote, warning her party's support is 'not unconditional'.

She told BBC's Andrew Marr Show: 'We very much share the view that there need to be public restrictions… we're still very concerned particularly in parts of the north of England like mine about the pressure on hospitals.

'So we don't share the view of those Tory backbenchers that you can just let this virus rip through the population with the damage that that would do, but we want clarity from the Government on two things.

'First of all, is this sufficient to get control of the virus – we're meeting the chief medical officer tomorrow afternoon to discuss that – and secondly whether people will actually be able to comply with this?

'We need to see proper support put in place so that people can comply, otherwise we could end up in a worse situation in January and nobody wants that.'

Many Tory backbenchers are angry that 99 per cent of England's population will be subject to the most stringent restrictions in tiers 2 and 3, which they argue will prove a disaster for the economy, and especially the battered hospitality industry in the crucial run-up to Christmas.

Last night, in an attempt to buy off the rebels ahead of Tuesday's vote on the restrictions, Mr Johnson promised to give MPs another vote on January 27, and said that a 'sunset clause' would mean that the current rules would automatically expire on February 3. It means the tier system could end in just nine weeks.

Mr Johnson also reiterated that the current measures – which economic experts project will cost the UK £900 million a day – would be reviewed on December 16.

Rebel leader Steve Baker, of the Covid Recovery Group, said that he and fellow Tory backbenchers would 'digest the content' of Mr Johnson's offer over the weekend, but called on Number 10 to publish a full analysis of the 'health, economic and social impacts of Covid and the measures taken to suppress them'. 

Mr Baker said the rebels were 'grateful for the constructive approach being taken by the Prime Minister', but said: 'The key thing MPs have been asking for before next week's vote has not yet been published.'

The UK's coronavirus reproduction rate may have fallen below the crucial number of one. SAGE believes every region in England has an R below one except London and the South East, where it is hovering around the crucial number
A growing number of Tory MPs have been openly critical of the government's local lockdown tiers - although some have indicated they plan to abstain in a crunch vote next week rather than oppose the plan outright.

The UK's coronavirus reproduction rate may have fallen below the crucial number of one (shown left), with SAGE estimating every region in England has an R below one except London and the South East, where it is hovering around the crucial number. A growing number of Tory MPs (listed right) have been openly critical of the government's local lockdown tiers - although some have indicated they plan to abstain in a crunch vote next week rather than oppose the plan outright

Health minister 'told MPs it is hard to find staff to run Nightingale hospitals because they are 'dark and dingy''

Ministers are facing accusations of exaggerating capacity issues within the NHS to make the case for the new tier system after it was claimed a health minister told Tory MPs that Nightingale hospitals were largely empty.

Michael Gove prompted Conservative backbencher fury on Saturday after he said hospitals, including Nightingale emergency facilities, could be 'physically overwhelmed' without tough coronavirus curbs in the coming weeks. 

But Tory MPs told the Observer that Nadine Dorries, a health minister, had told a group of them last week that the emergency hospitals set up specifically for the Covid-19 outbreak were largely unfilled because they are viewed as 'dark and dingy', making it hard to recruit staff to work there.

Sources close to Ms Dorries denied she had used those words. 

Advertisement

One of the potential Tory rebels, Pauline Latham, said this morning Mr Johnson 'won't have a rebellion' if he publishes the evidence which shows why the tiers are necessary.

She told Sky's Sophy Ridge On Sunday: 'I'd like to see the data. I'd like to see the evidence, more evidence than we've been given.

'If we can see that then I do feel I might be able to support them, particularly as we're looking at having another vote in January.'

She added: 'I think it will depend very much on what Boris does between now and Tuesday.

'If he produces that evidence and he can prove to us that he's got good evidence to go on then I think he won't have a rebellion.'

Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove had previously moved to quell the rebel Tories. 

He told the MPs, who include backbench 1922 Committee chairman Sir Graham Brady, that their failure to back Number 10's policy on Tuesday – the day before tiers are set to be introduced – could lead to every hospital in England being 'overwhelmed' with Covid-19 cases.

Backbench anger was fuelled by reports that senior officials plan to ban all indoor socialising until Easter, although in his Mail on Sunday article Mr Johnson said that 'with the help of these scientific advances we hope to make progress – and to de-escalate – BEFORE Easter'.

Also writing in the newspaper, senior Tory MP Tom Tugendhat, the powerful chair of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, criticised the way the tiering regime was devised and implemented. 

In a stern warning, he said the isolation of lockdowns has made 'some people question whether life is worth living'.

Elsewhere in this newspaper, fellow Tory MP Charles Walker said that the arrest of an elderly anti-lockdown protester outside Parliament last week demonstrated a 'cavalier approach to the trashing of our constituents' civil liberties'.

The tier system will be reviewed on December 16, with Number 10 hopeful that some areas in the most restrictive tier 3 band will then be able to move to tier 2 as a 'morale booster'.

Reports suggest Greater Manchester could be among the first areas shifted from tier 3 to tier 2. 

Andy Burnham, the mayor of the region, has been told that it will be downgraded after the first review takes place, according to the Sunday Times. 

In his article, Mr Johnson mounted a plea for patience by the British public as he said: 'We have worked too hard, lost too many, sacrificed too much, just to see our efforts incinerated in another volcanic eruption of the virus'.

But he insisted we will soon 'drive Covid out of our lives'. 

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtODk5ODM2NS9Db3ZpZC1ob3NwaXRhbC1kZWF0aHMtZHJvcC04LTIyOS1uZXctZmF0YWxpdGllcy1yZXBvcnRlZC5odG1s0gFyaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZGFpbHltYWlsLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYXJ0aWNsZS04OTk4MzY1L2FtcC9Db3ZpZC1ob3NwaXRhbC1kZWF0aHMtZHJvcC04LTIyOS1uZXctZmF0YWxpdGllcy1yZXBvcnRlZC5odG1s?oc=5

2020-11-29 14:37:00Z
52781214881043

21 Savage: Tyrece Fuller charged with murdering rapper's brother - BBC News

Terrell Davis, 27,
Met Police

A man has been charged with murdering the brother of a Grammy-award winning rapper in south London.

Terrell Davis, the brother of US rapper 21 Savage, was found injured in Ramillies Close, Lambeth, last Sunday. He died at the scene.

He was also a rapper and performed as TM1way.

Tyrece Fuller, 21, of Tavy Close, Lambeth, was charged on Saturday and will appear before Bromley magistrates on Monday.

21 Savage
Getty Images

In an online tribute, 21 Savage, whose real name is She'yaa Bin Abraham-Joseph, posted a picture of the pair on Instagram as young boys and more recent images of Mr Davis.

He wrote: "Can't believe somebody took you baby bro."

Though based in the US, the rapper was born in Newham, London.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiNWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtbG9uZG9uLTU1MTIxNTA50gE5aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtbG9uZG9uLTU1MTIxNTA5?oc=5

2020-11-29 14:15:00Z
CBMiNWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtbG9uZG9uLTU1MTIxNTA50gE5aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtbG9uZG9uLTU1MTIxNTA5

Boris Johnson issues warning to nation not to ‘blow it’ after lockdown - Metro.co.uk

FILE PHOTO: Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson wears a face mask as he visits the Public Health England site at the Porton Down science park, near Salisbury, Britain November 27, 2020. Adrian Dennis/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Boris Johnson wears a face mask as he visits the Public Health England site at Porton Down science park (Picture: Reuters)

Boris Johnson has warned there will be ‘disastrous consequences’ for the NHS without the three-tiered system of restrictions when the lockdown ends next week.

The Prime Minister urged the nation to ‘work together’ with tiering, testing and vaccines, as he stressed it was too early to relax restrictions.

But the PM, who faces a showdown with his own MPs over the stringent measures, said he believed Easter would mark a ‘real chance to return to something like life as normal’.

Writing in the Mail on Sunday, he said: ‘We can’t blow it now. We can’t just throw it all away – not when freedom is in sight. We have worked too hard, lost too many, sacrificed too much, just to see our efforts incinerated in another volcanic eruption of the virus…

Advertisement

Advertisement

Visit our live blog for the latest updates Coronavirus news live

‘We are so nearly out of our captivity. We can see the sunlit upland pastures ahead. But if we try to jump the fence now, we will simply tangle ourselves in the last barbed wire, with disastrous consequences for the NHS.

‘So let’s do the job properly. Let’s work together, and with tiering, testing and vaccines let’s make 2021 the year we kick Covid out, take back control of our lives and reclaim all the things we love.’

The Prime Minister likened the development of effective vaccines to the ‘morale-boosting bugle-blasting excitement of Wellington’s Prussian allies coming through the woods on the afternoon of Waterloo’.

And he said: ‘If and when we can begin delivering those shots in the national arm – beginning with the most vulnerable groups – we will know we have won.’

A pedestrian wearing a mask because of the novel coronavirus pandemic walks past shops with Christmas decorations on Oxford Street in London on November 26, 2020. - London will escape the tightest restrictions once England's national coronavirus lockdown ends next week, the government said Thursday, but major cities including Manchester and Birmingham face at least two more weeks of tough rules. England will return to a regional tiered system when the national regulations end on December 2, with those areas suffering the worst case rates entering the highest Tier 3. (Photo by DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP via Getty Images)
A woman wears a mask as she walks by closed shops on Oxford Street (Picture: AFP)

He also said that at the first review of the measures on December 16 he would move areas down a tier where there is ‘robust evidence’ that coronavirus is in sustained decline.

His comments came as he attempted to head off a rebellion by offering Parliament another chance to vote on the restrictions early next year, saying the legislation will have a ‘sunset of February 3’.

Mr Johnson said the Government will review local areas’ tiers every fortnight and bring the regulations before Parliament after the fourth review on January 27 which will determine whether the tier system stays in place until the end of March.

He also said the first such review, on December 16, would consider the views of local directors of public health, with a final decision on whether any areas should change tiers made at a Cabinet committee. The changes would come into effect on December 19.

Only the Isle of Wight, Cornwall, and the Isles of Scilly will be under the lightest Tier 1 controls, while large swathes of the Midlands, North East and North West are in the most restrictive Tier 3.

In total, 99% of England will enter Tier 2 or 3, with tight restrictions on bars and restaurants and a ban on households mixing indoors when the four-week national lockdown lifts on Wednesday.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiZWh0dHBzOi8vbWV0cm8uY28udWsvMjAyMC8xMS8yOS9ib3Jpcy1pc3N1ZXMtd2FybmluZy10by1uYXRpb24tbm90LXRvLWJsb3ctaXQtYWZ0ZXItbG9ja2Rvd24tMTM2NzIxNzYv0gFpaHR0cHM6Ly9tZXRyby5jby51ay8yMDIwLzExLzI5L2JvcmlzLWlzc3Vlcy13YXJuaW5nLXRvLW5hdGlvbi1ub3QtdG8tYmxvdy1pdC1hZnRlci1sb2NrZG93bi0xMzY3MjE3Ni9hbXAv?oc=5

2020-11-29 12:34:00Z
52781212068131