Minggu, 14 Februari 2021

COVID-19: Domestic vaccine certificates 'under consideration', Dominic Raab says - Sky News

Vaccine certificates to let Britons prove they have been inoculated against coronavirus are "under consideration", the foreign secretary has suggested.

Dominic Raab sparked surprise by saying the idea "hasn't been ruled out", after it was repeatedly rubbished by some other ministers.

The documents have been mooted given the fast-paced rollout of COVID-19 jabs, as attention turns to when and how restrictions can be lifted.

Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi suggested in November that the government was considering "immunity passports" and suggested firms like bars and cinemas "will probably also use that system".

But that was later rubbished by Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove, who told Sky News: "I certainly am not planning to introduce any vaccine passports, and I don't know anyone else in government who is."

Sky News then revealed earlier this week that the Cabinet Office had drawn up a proposal to introduce vaccine and testing certificates for when international travel is allowed again, with Mr Raab's support.

When asked on Sunday about the prospect of documents being needed domestically, for example to let a person enter a supermarket, Mr Raab told LBC: "Well it's something that hasn't been ruled out.

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"It's under consideration, but of course you've got to make it workable.

"I think the thing with when I've looked at this [is], whether it's at the international, domestic or local level, you've got to know that the document that is being presented is something you can rely on - that it is an accurate status of the individual.

"So I'm not sure there's a fool-proof answer in the way that sometimes it's presented, but we'll look at all the options."

Asked if it was illegal to stop a person entering a restaurant or shop on the basis of their vaccine status, Mr Raab said: "In terms of the law that would apply, that's something that's the prerogative of the government and parliament.

"But what we want to do is make sure there's enough confidence in the national rollout, that when we're in a position to open non-essential retail and in due course after that hospitality, people can do so confidently.

"The legalities and the mechanisms, that all needs to be worked out. And the prime minister I said will give a clearer sense of the direction of travel on 22 February."

EMBARGOED TO 0001 MONDAY FEBRUARY 15 File photo dated 26/12/20 of people making their way past a Government coronavirus Tier 4 sign on the High street in Winchester, Hampshire. An influential group of MPs from across party lines have called on the Government to lay out clear criteria for when restrictions will be lifted and plug gaps in its support schemes. Issue date: Monday February 15, 2021.
Image: Boris Johnson is due to announce his roadmap out of lockdown from 22 February

A source close to Mr Raab clarified afterwards he had been taking about the issue in general and not specifically supermarkets, adding vaccine certificates are more being thought about for international travel than domestic use.

Speaking to Sophy Ridge On Sunday, Mr Raab resisted calls from dozens of Tory MPs who are urging the government to lift restrictions in May, when all the top nine priority groups should have been offered a coronavirus vaccine.

He refused to set an "arbitrary target" and added ministers will continue to be "evidence-led".

Sky News understands the government is aiming to have all schools open on 8 March, but sources say that is dependent on the data and hospital pressures

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2021-02-14 12:28:01Z
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Dominic Raab says 'vaccine passports' COULD be used inside the UK - Daily Mail

Dominic Raab says 'vaccine passports' COULD be needed to get into pubs or supermarkets in the UK despite the government insisting they will only be used for foreign travel

  • Dominic Raab said 'vaccine passports' for use within UK 'under consideration'
  • Government previously insisted that any system would be for for foreign travel
  • Asked if proof of jab could be needed to go into supermarket, said not 'ruled out'

The government was facing more confusion over 'vaccine passports' today after Dominic Raab suggested they could be needed to get into pubs and supermarkets in the UK.

The Foreign Secretary appeared to contradict a series of other government statements as he said the idea was 'under consideration'.

The comments risked provoking anger from Tories who are already deeply alarmed about the way the pandemic has hammered civil liberties.

Aides scrambled to clarify that Mr Raab had been responding to a 'hypothetical' question and while 'vaccine passports' are being looked at for international travel, they are 'not being considered domestically'.    

Ministers have revealed that work is under way on a system that could allow foreign travel to resume, with Spain the latest country to say it is ready to welcome Brits who have had jabs.

But the government has repeatedly said such documents will not be introduced in the UK, suggesting it would be 'discriminatory'. Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said just last week that the move is 'not on the cards'.

The dramatically different position from Mr Raab came in an interview on LBC radio this morning.   

Dominic Raab contradicted a series of other government statements as he said the idea was 'under consideration'

Dominic Raab contradicted a series of other government statements as he said the idea was 'under consideration'

Spain says Brits could be visiting this summer

Spain's tourism minister has fuelled hopes Britons could go on holiday this summer with 'vaccine passports'. 

Fernando Valdes has reportedly raised the prospect that travel could resume within months due to the success of the UK's rollout.

He also played down the idea that holidaymakers would have to quarantine when they arrived in Spain, saying there are 'other means' of limiting spread.

The optimistic comments emerged as the government steps up work on a system of 'vaccine passports' that could free those who have had jabs from the draconian restrictions on travel.

UK ministers have refused to be drawn on when holidays might be back on the agenda, amid mixed messages on whether anyone should be looking to book at this stage. 

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Pressed repeatedly on whether 'vaccine passports' could be needed to get into pubs and supermarkets in this country, he said: 'It is something that hasn't been ruled out. It is under consideration. But of course you've got to make it workable.'

Mr Raab said the 'modalities and mechanisms' of how people could prove they have been vaccinated were all being looked at.

'You've got to know that the document that is being presented is something that you can rely on,' he said. 

The comments came amid claims major City firms are expecting to start using digital health passports from next month to help get staff back to offices.

Covid-19 testing firm Prenetics has signed deals with around 100 companies – including investment banks based at Canary Wharf in London – to help get staff back to work safely.

Employees using its Digital Health Passport will download an app onto their mobile phone, which will store results of their Covid tests and vaccine certificates when they have had their jabs.

Meanwhile, Spain's tourism minister has fuelled hopes Britons could go on holiday this summer with 'vaccine passports'. 

Fernando Valdes has reportedly raised the prospect that travel could resume within months due to the success of the UK's rollout.

He also played down the idea that holidaymakers would have to quarantine when they arrived in Spain, saying there are 'other means' of limiting spread.

The optimistic comments emerged as the government steps up work on a system of 'vaccine passports' that could free those who have had jabs from the draconian restrictions on travel.

UK ministers have refused to be drawn on when holidays might be back on the agenda, amid mixed messages on whether anyone should be looking to book at this stage. 

Spain's tourism minister has fuelled hopes Britons could go on holiday this summer with 'vaccine passports'. Pictured, Playa de Alcudia beach in Mallorca

Spain's tourism minister has fuelled hopes Britons could go on holiday this summer with 'vaccine passports'. Pictured, Playa de Alcudia beach in Mallorca

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2021-02-14 10:34:00Z
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'Boris's burrow': Tunnel linking Scotland and N Ireland backed by Scottish secretary Alister Jack - Sky News

A 25-mile undersea tunnel linking Scotland to Northern Ireland is the way forward, according to the secretary of state for Scotland.

Alister Jack reiterated his support for the link ahead of the expected release of a study that could kick off a formal consultation on the idea - dubbed "Boris's burrow".

The prime minister first backed the idea of connecting Larne in Northern Ireland to Stranraer in Scotland when he was foreign secretary in 2018.

But his idea of a bridge appears to have fallen out of favour as too complex and expensive, with a tunnel now seen as the preferred option.

It would be about 25 miles long, not far off the Channel Tunnel's 31 miles, and provide a road and rail link.

A report on UK transport infrastructure by the head of Network Rail, Sir Peter Hendy, is reportedly imminent and expected to say the project is possible.

That could kick off a formal government feasibility study.

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Prime Minister Boris Johnson, with Scottish Secretary Alister Jack, returning to Downing Street, London, after attending the government's weekly Cabinet meeting at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO)
Image: AlisterJack (left) said he strongly believes the PM favours the idea of a tunnel

Scotland Secretary Alister Jack said he had talked to the prime minister and that a tunnel appeared the most viable way forward.

He told the Daily Telegraph's Chopper's Politics podcast: "You say bridge. I say tunnel. I think a bridge would be closed for probably 100 days a year with the weather in the Irish Sea."

Mr Jack is MP for Dumfries and Galloway, which includes Stranraer, the mooted location for one end of the tunnel.

He added: "My strong inclination would be that he [Mr Johnson] thinks it should be a tunnel because he and I have had conversations about the weather patterns in the Irish Sea and Beaufort's Dyke, and there's a munitions deposit there."

Any project would also have to avoid the dyke, a 30-mile trench up to 300m deep.

The proposed tunnel would be about six mile shorter than the Channel Tunnel
Image: The proposed tunnel would be about six miles shorter than the Channel Tunnel

It is Britain's largest-known military dump, with the MoD offloading around a million tons of munitions there between the 1940s and 1970s.

But Simon Hoare, Tory MP and chair of the Commons Northern Ireland affairs select committee, ridiculed the latest suggestion of a tunnel.

"The trains could be pulled by an inexhaustible herd of Unicorns overseen by stern, officious dodos," he tweeted.

"A PushmePullYou could be the senior guard and Puff the Magic Dragon the inspector.

"Let's concentrate on making the Protocol work and put the hallucinogenics down."

The idea behind the project is to boost the regional and wider UK economy by making it quicker for people to travel and transport goods.

A similar project under way in Europe is an 11-mile tunnel under the Baltic Sea connecting Germany with Denmark.

Scheduled to complete in 2029, it will provide a major link between central Europe and Scandinavia.

The world's longest tunnel with an undersea segment is Japan's Seikan Tunnel, at more than 33 miles long with 14.5 miles under the seabed.

However, the Channel Tunnel has the longest section underwater - 23.5 miles.

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2021-02-14 12:22:30Z
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COVID-19: Raab says govt won't be held to 'arbitrary target' of lifting lockdown by end of April - Sky News

The government will not be setting an "arbitrary target" for when lockdown can be lifted despite pressure from some MPs to scrap all restrictions by the end of April, the foreign secretary has told Sky News.

Dominic Raab said the plan was to "ease the lockdown" with the return of schools, which Prime Minister Boris Johnson has previously said will happen on 8 March at the "earliest".

More than 60 Conservative backbenchers are said to have backed a letter to the PM from the lockdown-sceptic COVID Recovery Group (CRG), which said there will be "no justification" for restrictions to remain once all over-50s have been offered a jab.

All the latest updates from Sophy Ridge On Sunday

General view of a near deserted Piccadilly Circus, London, during England's third national lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus. Picture date: Friday January 29, 2021.
Image: More than 60 Tory backbenchers are said to have backed a letter to the PM calling for lockdown to end by May

But Mr Raab told Sky's Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme: "The plan is to get the 99% of people at risk of dying dispensed their first dose by the end of April, or certainly offered their first dose.

"By doing so, taking the fatality out of this virus, we're in a much better position to proceed to start to ease the lockdown... starting with schools, non-essential retail.

"I don't think you can set an arbitrary target and not be evidence led, which is why the review on 22 February is so important."

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Mr Johnson is planning to unveil a roadmap for easing England's lockdown on 22 February.

Mr Raab told Sky News that the government is "hoping" for schools to reopen in England on March 8 as planned.

"We need to wait to evaluate the data carefully and allow those plans to be put in place," the foreign secretary said.

"Because we are making progress I think we can be confident we will be able to start that process of getting schools open on the 8th."

Mr Raab said getting non-essential retail open will be "very important" and "things like the ability to socialise with people outside...are quality of life issues, they really matter so they're not small thing".

But he warned the government would take a "careful" approach towards the easing of restrictions.

"We have made good progress," Mr Raab said. "We don't want to see that unravel because we go too far too quick."

The CRG has described reopening England's schools on 8 March as a "national priority" that must be achieved, and said pubs and restaurants should be allowed to open in a COVID-secure way by Easter.

The group wrote: "COVID is a serious disease and we must control it. However, just like COVID, lockdowns and restrictions cause immense social and health damage, and have a huge impact on people's livelihoods.

"The vaccine gives us immunity from COVID, but it must also give us permanent immunity from COVID-related lockdowns and restrictions."

Mr Raab, however, said the government will not make a "slightly arbitrary commitment" on lifting lockdown "without reviewing the impact that measures have had on the transmission and the hospital admissions of the virus".

The foreign secretary also confirmed the government is "on track" to meet its target of offering a coronavirus jab to the 15 million people in its four top priority groups by Monday.

This includes older care home residents and staff, everyone over 70, all frontline NHS and care staff, and those who are clinically extremely vulnerable.

As of Saturday, the number of UK adults given one dose of a coronavirus vaccine has risen to 14,556,827.

NHS staff are also going to begin vaccinating the over-65s and clinically vulnerable from Monday, with more than a million people having already received their invitations to book a jab.

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2021-02-14 10:30:00Z
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COVID-19: Raab says No 10 will not be held to 'arbitrary target' for lifting lockdown after calls to end all restrictions by end of April - Sky News

The government will not be setting an "arbitrary target" for when lockdown can end despite pressure from some MPs to lift all restrictions by May, the foreign secretary has told Sky News.

Dominic Raab said the plan was to "ease the lockdown" with the return of schools, which Prime Minister Boris Johnson has previously said will happen on 8 March at the "earliest".

More than 60 Conservative backbenchers are said to have backed a letter from the lockdown-sceptic COVID Recovery Group (CRG) to the prime minister, which said there will be "no justification" for restrictions to remain once all over-50s have been offered a jab.

But Mr Raab told Sky's Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme: "The plan is to get the 99% of people at risk of dying dispensed their first dose by the end of April, or certainly offered their first dose.

"By doing so, taking the fatality out of this virus, we're in a much better position to proceed to start to ease the lockdown... starting with schools, non-essential retail.

"I don't think you can set an arbitrary target and not be evidence led, which is why the review on 22 February is so important."

The CRG has described reopening England's schools on 8 March as a "national priority" that must be achieved, and said pubs and restaurants should be allowed to open in a COVID-secure way by Easter.

More from Covid-19

The group wrote: "COVID is a serious disease and we must control it. However, just like COVID, lockdowns and restrictions cause immense social and health damage, and have a huge impact on people's livelihoods.

"The vaccine gives us immunity from COVID, but it must also give us permanent immunity from COVID-related lockdowns and restrictions."

General view of a near deserted Piccadilly Circus, London, during England's third national lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus. Picture date: Friday January 29, 2021.
Image: More than 60 Tory backbenchers are said to have backed a letter to the PM calling for lockdown to end by May

Mr Raab, however, said the government will not make what feels to him like a "slightly arbitrary commitment without reviewing the impact that measures have had on the transmission and the hospital admissions of the virus".

He told Sky News the government hoped to begin reopening schools in England on March 8 as planned.

"We need to wait to evaluate the data carefully and allow those plans to be put in place," he said.

"Because we are making progress I think we can be confident we will be able to start that process."

However, he said the government would take a "careful" approach towards the easing of lockdown restrictions.

"We do need to be very careful how we proceed. We have made good progress. We don't want to see that unravel because we go too far too quick," he said.

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2021-02-14 09:32:59Z
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Boris Johnson prepares lockdown loosening with pubs 'back in April' - Daily Mail

ALL children back in school from March 8 and you can have a picnic in the park: Boris Johnson prepares lockdown loosening with pubs and restaurants 'set for al fresco reopening in APRIL'

  • Boris Johnson is preparing to unveil a loosening of lockdown amid massive pressure from Tory backbenchers
  • All children could be allowed back in classrooms from March 8 after the PM vowed to prioritise education
  • Ban on picnics in park with own household and stopping to chat with a friend on a park bench could be lifted
  • Pubs and restaurants could be permitted to reopen 'al fresco' from April under the premier's new 'road map'
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Boris Johnson is set to order the reopening of all schools from March 8 with picnics in the park back on the agenda and 'al fresco' meet-ups in pubs allowed from April, it was claimed today.

The PM is preparing a loosening of the draconian coronavirus restrictions on everyday life amid massive pressure from Tory MPs who fear huge collateral damage is being done to the country and economy.   

Under the 'roadmap' - due to be unveiled on February 22 - all primary and secondary schools could return from March 8, with Mr Johnson having made clear children's education is the top priority.

However, at the same time people could be allowed to sit and chat on park benches with a friend, and have picnics with their household 'bubble' - something that is currently banned. 

The current thinking in No10 is that the beleaguered hospitality industry could lift its shutters from the beginning of April.

In a break from earlier pre-lockdown rules, the 10pm curfew and the requirement to have a substantial meal with alcohol will be abandoned. Restrictions on sports such as tennis and golf, where social distancing is easier, are likely to be eased in April.

Details of the blueprint started to leak out at as Mr Johnson gets ready to celebrate meeting his target of vaccinating the 15million most vulnerable people in the UK by tomorrow.

In his most upbeat assessment for weeks, Mr Johnson yesterday said: 'I won't hide it from you. I'm optimistic, but we have to be cautious.' 

The Tory Coronavirus Research Group, which includes around 70 MPs, has been demanding that all coronavirus restrictions are removed by May, when around 32million people in the top nine categories are due to have been given jabs.

However, scientists have been urging a much more cautious approach warning that infections remain high and the threat of variant strains emerging that can dodge vaccines is too great.   

In other coronavirus developments today: 

  • Former Prime Minister Tony Blair reiterated his calls for a global coronavirus vaccine passport scheme as Spain said it is open to Britons going there this summer;
  • There were claims that some care home bosses are threatening staff who refuse to have the jab with the sack;  
  • Health Secretary Matt Hancock clashed with senior Tory Sir Charles Walker over the ten-year jail terms facing those who flout new quarantine rules, with Sir Charles saying the policy was 'disastrous' and a repeat should cost the Health Secretary his job;
  • The head of Heathrow warned that the airport is not ready to roll out the hotel quarantine scheme set to be imposed from tomorrow;
  • AstraZeneca said it would expand trials of its Oxford vaccine to children as young as six while Janssen, another pharma firm, said it may start testing its jab on newborn babies and pregnant women;
  • Police said officers would be carrying out spot checks on drivers today to see if they were making 'non-essential' trips to visit lovers on Valentine's Day;
  • A video emerged of militant teachers boasting about how they used threats of strike action to keep classrooms closed, fuelling fears that hardline unions will seek to derail plans to reopen schools;
  • Documents emerged suggesting the Wuhan laboratory at the centre of global suspicion over the pandemic planned to experiment on live bats;
  • Additional surge testing began in Middlesbrough, Walsall and Hampshire after cases of the South Africa variant of Covid-19 were identified.
Lockdown misery is set to end by Easter, with people finally free to drink in beer gardens and dine outside restaurants again. Diners are pictured above at a restaurant in Dundee, Scotland in July last year after restrictions were eased

Lockdown misery is set to end by Easter, with people finally free to drink in beer gardens and dine outside restaurants again. Diners are pictured above at a restaurant in Dundee, Scotland in July last year after restrictions were eased

Under Boris Johnson’s ‘roadmap’ for a steady return to normality, No 10 plans to allow the beleaguered hospitality industry to lift its shutters, most likely on Tuesday March 30 or the following day. Customers are seen enjoying a pint in Scotland last July

Under Boris Johnson's 'roadmap' for a steady return to normality, No 10 plans to allow the beleaguered hospitality industry to lift its shutters, most likely on Tuesday March 30 or the following day. Customers are seen enjoying a pint in Scotland last July

According to the latest figures, there were 13,308 new positive cases in the previous 24 hours – down 27 per cent on a week earlier. Hospital admissions fell by 26 per cent to 1,741 over the same period, while deaths were down by the same proportion to 621.

The vaccination programme continued to surge towards its target – up by 544,603 to a total of 14,556,827. It means 26.9 per cent of the adult population has now received at least one dose.

The steady fall in new infections, and estimates that the critical R rate of infection now lies between 0.7 and 0.9, has increased the restlessness on the Tory backbenches over the economic and societal damage being caused by lockdown.

This weekend, 63 Tory MPs have signed a letter to Mr Johnson urging him to use the vaccine to 'give us permanent immunity from Covid-related lockdowns and restrictions'.

The letter, organised by Mark Harper, the chair of the CRG, argues that 'just like Covid, lockdowns and restrictions cause immense social and health damage and have a huge impact on people's livelihoods'.

Urging the reopening of all schools on March 8 and of hospitality by Easter, the weekend of April 4, the MPs say: 'All restrictions remaining after March 8 should be proportionate to the ever-increasing number of people we have protected. 

'The burden is on Ministers to demonstrate the evidence of effectiveness and proportionality with a cost-benefit analysis for each restriction, and a roadmap for when they will be removed... Once all nine priority groups have been protected by the end of April, there is no justification for any legislative restrictions to remain.'

They conclude: 'This should be a moment of unity – for our country and our party – as we look ahead with confidence, hope and optimism for a much brighter future, as we reclaim our lives once and for all.'

The timetable they demand for reopening schools and hospitality look set to be met amid a growing sense in Downing Street that the 'tide is turning' in the year-long Covid crisis.

Speaking during a visit to the Teesside plant where the new Novavax vaccine will be manufactured, Mr Johnson said: 'Our children's education is our number one priority.

'But then, working forward, getting non-essential retail open as well, and then, in due course, as and when we can, prudently, cautiously, of course, we want to be opening hospitality as well. I will be trying to set out as much as I possibly can in as much detail as I can, always understanding that we have to be wary of the pattern of disease.

'We don't want to be forced into any kind of retreat or reverse ferret' – a media term denoting a sudden reversal of direction.

Echoing Mr Hancock's claim that Covid could become a 'treatable' disease, Mr Johnson predicted we will have 'to learn to live with' coronavirus.

According to the Sunday Times, the government is drawing up three options for the easing of restrictions, depending on progress tackling infections and emerging data on the effectiveness of vaccines.

The slowest timetable would not see shops and hospitality fully open until August. 

Top Tory Sir Charles Walker warns Matt Hancock that 'Boris should sack you' if he makes another gaffe like the 10-year jail terms fiasco 

Simmering Tory tensions over lockdown came to a head in spectacular fashion last week when venerable backbencher Sir Charles Walker encountered Health Secretary Matt Hancock in the Commons.

Sir Charles passionately believes that measures to limit the spread of the virus risk causing more harm than they prevent, particularly in terms of mental health.

By contrast Mr Hancock has consistently argued that the protection of the NHS should be the over-arching priority.

Sir Charles was enraged by the chaos over messages from Mr Hancock and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps over whether people should book a summer holiday – and by the decision to impose a ten-year jail sentence on people who flout strict new quarantine rules, a rule introduced without MPs getting a chance to vote on it.

So when Mr Hancock addressed a private meeting of the backbench 1922 Committee, of which Sir Charles is vice-chairman, he let rip at the Cabinet Minister, telling him that the Prime Minister's 'legs have been cut from underneath him as a result of the interventions' by Mr Hancock and Mr Shapps, adding: 'If the PM is let down again by his Secretaries of State, he should remove them from Cabinet'.

With 'vaccines coming out of our ears', as Sir Charles has put it, impatience on the party's backbenches is growing.

By last night, a total of 63 Tory MPs had signed a letter from the party's Covid Recovery Group urging a swift exit from lockdown – easily enough to wipe out the Prime Minister's majority if they voted with Labour.  

The simmering Tory tensions over lockdown came to a head in spectacular fashion last week when venerable backbencher Sir Charles Walker encountered Health Secretary Matt Hancock in the Commons

The simmering Tory tensions over lockdown came to a head in spectacular fashion last week when venerable backbencher Sir Charles Walker encountered Health Secretary Matt Hancock in the Commons

Sir Charles passionately believes that measures to limit the spread of the virus risk causing more harm than they prevent, particularly in terms of mental health; Mr Hancock has consistently argued that the protection of the NHS should be the over-arching priority

Sir Charles passionately believes that measures to limit the spread of the virus risk causing more harm than they prevent, particularly in terms of mental health; Mr Hancock has consistently argued that the protection of the NHS should be the over-arching priority

Their views were summed up with the line: 'The vaccine gives us immunity from Covid but it must also give us permanent immunity from Covid-related lockdowns and restrictions'.

While the increasingly powerful group looks likely to be granted its wish for all pupils to be allowed to return to the classrooms on March 8, the issue which has most divided the Cabinet has been the fate of the hospitality industry – and specifically whether outside dining at pubs and restaurants should be allowed in April.

Last night, senior Government sources indicated that the group's demand for what's been dubbed 'alfresco April' to start at Easter, the weekend of April 4, was also likely to be met.

But the divide between the economic 'hawks' pushing for as much commercial activity as can be safely allowed – led by Chancellor Rishi Sunak – and the more cautious doves' has opened up again.

Mr Hancock and Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove led calls to wait until late April or May to reopen the hospitality industry, arguing that it would be wrong to 'casually dine al fresco' until the data was clearer on the vaccine's impact on transmission.

But the hand of the hawks has been strengthened by new data indicating that the Pfizer vaccine starts to work in as little as two weeks, reducing the symptomatic infection by around 65 per cent in both young adults and the over-80s. Data on post-vaccine transmission levels could be presented to the Prime Minister as soon as tomorrow.

Mr Sunak was joined by International Trade Secretary Liz Truss and Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng in calling for a fast easing of lockdown.

One source said: 'The difference between the two camps amounts to about three weeks – basically between the beginning of April or the end.'

Sir Charles was enraged by the chaos over messages from Mr Hancock and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps (pictured) over whether people should book a summer holiday – and by the decision to impose a ten-year jail sentence on people who flout strict new quarantine rules, a rule introduced without MPs getting a chance to vote on it.

Sir Charles was enraged by the chaos over messages from Mr Hancock and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps (pictured) over whether people should book a summer holiday – and by the decision to impose a ten-year jail sentence on people who flout strict new quarantine rules, a rule introduced without MPs getting a chance to vote on it.

By last night, a total of 63 Tory MPs had signed a letter from the party's Covid Recovery Group urging a swift exit from lockdown – easily enough to wipe out the Prime Minister's majority if they voted with Labour

By last night, a total of 63 Tory MPs had signed a letter from the party's Covid Recovery Group urging a swift exit from lockdown – easily enough to wipe out the Prime Minister's majority if they voted with Labour

Last night, senior Government sources indicated that the group's demand for what's been dubbed 'alfresco April' to start at Easter, the weekend of April 4, was also likely to be met

Last night, senior Government sources indicated that the group's demand for what's been dubbed 'alfresco April' to start at Easter, the weekend of April 4, was also likely to be met

And a Minister added: 'We are in the endgame now. Firemen damping down a blaze always stay longer after it's out. You don't want the fire smouldering and then reigniting. 

'We're all firemen in the Cabinet. We want to put the fire out, but won't stop [lockdown] until we are absolutely convinced that it is'.

No 10 has been angered by the perception that they have been 'held captive' by over-cautious scientists on the Sage group of advisers. 

One source said: 'It is not true. We are all working as hard as we can to get back to normal. Do not confuse uncertainty for lack of a plan'.

A handful of Ministers and scientific advisers have been drawing up the 'road map' for Boris Johnson to unveil this month, with the wider Cabinet likely to be talked through its broad points in advance of the announcement on February 22.

With Mr Johnson's target of vaccinating the most vulnerable 15 million people by tomorrow within reach, the Prime Minister has ordered a celebratory 'starburst' – a blitz of Ministerial visits – to target vaccination centres in a final push to encourage all vulnerable people to get the jab.

With Mr Johnson's target of vaccinating the most vulnerable 15 million people by tomorrow within reach, the Prime Minister has ordered a celebratory 'starburst' – a blitz of Ministerial visits – to target vaccination centres in a final push to encourage all vulnerable people to get the jab

With Mr Johnson's target of vaccinating the most vulnerable 15 million people by tomorrow within reach, the Prime Minister has ordered a celebratory 'starburst' – a blitz of Ministerial visits – to target vaccination centres in a final push to encourage all vulnerable people to get the jab

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) report today suggested suggested there were 695,400 Covid-19 cases in England alone by February 6, down 31 per cent from a fortnight ago in yet another firm sign the second wave is in retreat. This equates to one in eighty people having the virus

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) report today suggested suggested there were 695,400 Covid-19 cases in England alone by February 6, down 31 per cent from a fortnight ago in yet another firm sign the second wave is in retreat. This equates to one in eighty people having the virus

The drive includes a renewed effort to persuade care home workers to take up the jab by 'appealing to their altruism and public service', emphasising it not only protects them, but the people they work with.

But the pressure on the Government over the economic impact continues to mount from the backbenches: just yesterday, Nickie Aiken, the Tory MP for Westminster, says theatres in London's West End had warned that they needed between four and five months' notice before reopening, while, former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said the hospitality industry needed at least a month to gear up.

Sir Charles has become a rallying point for backbench discontent. He declined to comment on any remarks made behind closed doors at the 1922 Committee, but he told The Mail on Sunday that introducing the ten-year jail penalty without allowing proper debate in the Commons was a 'really low and underhand thing to do'.

He said: 'The idea that we are going to lock people up for ten years in a prison system already full to bursting is just not credible'.

One Tory MP said privately: 'Charles has a very good point. The absurd ten-year jail sentence stuff undermines our credibility and saying no summer holidays for people was pretty demoralising.'

But a government source defended Mr Hancock and Mr Shapps, saying 'enhanced border measures' were vital and that it was only wise to be cautious about booking holidays. 


MATT HANCOCK: I've danced a little jig at the joy the jab's giving

By Matt Hancock for the Mail on Sunday

Just over two months ago, grandmother Margaret Keenan, then aged 90, received the world's first clinically authorised coronavirus vaccine at University Hospital, Coventry.

Since that magical day, more than 14.5 million people have joined Margaret in getting protected – that's over one in four adults across the country.

We have thrown everything at the vaccine rollout and the whole project has shown a can-do attitude at its best. Now we're homing in on our target of offering a vaccine to everyone in the four most vulnerable groups by tomorrow.

This monumental operation across all parts of the UK has given hope and comfort to so many families. Mine is no different, and I've danced a little jig as I've seen for myself the joy it can bring, as my grandfather, mum, dad, step-parents and in-laws and many loved ones have each in turn had their jabs these past few weeks.

Just over two months ago, grandmother Margaret Keenan, then aged 90, received the world's first clinically authorised coronavirus vaccine at University Hospital, Coventry

Just over two months ago, grandmother Margaret Keenan, then aged 90, received the world's first clinically authorised coronavirus vaccine at University Hospital, Coventry

I'd like to thank everyone who has played a part in this exceptional national effort – demonstrating the best of British at our time of crisis.

I've been thrilled to see the level of enthusiasm people have shown to get protected, with nearly all over-70s having had their first dose. This is a take-up beyond my highest hopes.

Because we have made such huge strides in protecting those at greatest risk, we are now in a position to extend eligibility even further and offer invites to over- 65s this week.

This will mean that millions more people in England will be eligible for vaccines and benefit from the protection it provides. 

'I know people in their late 60s who have barely left the house for months and have been looking forward to this moment so much. 

Since that magical day, more than 14.5 million people have joined Margaret in getting protected – that's over one in four adults across the country

Since that magical day, more than 14.5 million people have joined Margaret in getting protected – that's over one in four adults across the country

And meanwhile we will keep working to reach the people in the four most vulnerable groups who have not yet come forward. 

If you live in England, are 70 and over and haven't yet got an appointment to get vaccinated, please contact the NHS, either online through the National Booking Service, or if you can't get online, by phoning 119. 

I know there are some people who might have concerns. We're determined to do everything we can to address any questions about the vaccine because we know it is safe, and we want as many people to take up the life-saving chance to be protected against the Covid-19 virus.

This weekend the Government published the vaccine uptake plan, setting out how we will boost vaccine take-up in all our communities, with a particular focus on vulnerable and under-served groups.

This matters to us all. The fewer people who are left unprotected, the safer we will all be, and the more securely we will be able to release restrictions when the time is right.

This programme offers a clear pathway out of the pandemic. Meantime, while the vaccinators and volunteers do their work, we must all answer our country's call, and follow the rules that will keep this virus at bay.

Is this finally proof the vaccine is working in Britain? Covid deaths among over-85s plummet by 41% - almost twice as fast as un-vaccinated people over-65s - as new figures show just 1% of people have refused to get the jab

By Tom Pyman for MailOnline 

The number of Covid deaths in over-85s is falling twice as fast it is in younger Brits, raising hopes that the UK's vaccine drive is clicking into gear, with just one per cent of the population refusing jabs.

The Government's target of administering 15 million doses is set to be hit this weekend, amid a backdrop of falling cases and deaths, with pressure growing on Boris Johnson to present his 'roadmap' out of lockdown.

The supreme efforts of volunteers over recent weeks now appears to be paying dividends, with the number of fatalities among the oldest age group now falling on average by some 41 per cent a week.

By contrast, the number of weekly deaths is falling by 22 per cent for those aged under 65.  

Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter, a risk expert from the University of Cambridge, told the Sun: 'There is a statistically significant difference between the age groups. A substantial amount of this difference will be vaccines.

'And, by the end of the month, it's going to be quite dramatic. It is quite tricky to spot as deaths are falling everywhere — it's just that in older groups the drop is much faster than others.'

Meanwhile, data from the Office for National Statistics reveals just one in every 100 people offered a Covid jab have turned it down.

The Prime Minister said today he is 'optimistic' he will be able to begin announcing the easing of restrictions when he sets out his 'roadmap' out of lockdown in England on February 22. 

A woman receives the AstraZeneca Covid19 vaccine at an NHS vaccination centre in Ealing, west London yesterday

A woman receives the AstraZeneca Covid19 vaccine at an NHS vaccination centre in Ealing, west London yesterday

 Speaking during a visit to the Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies plant in Billingham, Teesside, where the new Novavax vaccine will be manufactured, Mr Johnson said: 'I'm optimistic, I won't hide it from you. I'm optimistic, but we have to be cautious.'

He said his first priority remained opening schools in England on March 8 to be followed by other sectors.

'Our children's education is our number one priority, but then working forward, getting non-essential retail open as well and then, in due course as and when we can prudently, cautiously, of course we want to be opening hospitality as well,' he said.

'I will be trying to set out as much as I possibly can in as much detail as I can, always understanding that we have to be wary of the pattern of disease. We don't want to be forced into any kind of retreat or reverse ferret.' 

Health conditions that make patients in Priority Group Six eligible for a vaccine 

A blood cancer (such as leukaemia, lymphoma or myeloma)

Diabetes

Dementia

A heart problem

A chest complaint or breathing difficulties, including bronchitis, emphysema or severe asthma

A kidney disease

A liver disease

Lowered immunity due to disease or treatment (such as HIV infection, steroid medication, chemotherapy or radiotherapy)

Rheumatoid arthritis, lupus or psoriasis (who may require long term immunosuppressive treatments)

Have had an organ transplant

Had a stroke or a transient ischaemic attack (TIA)

A neurological or muscle wasting condition

A severe or profound learning disability

A problem with your spleen, example sickle cell disease, or you have had your spleen removed

Are seriously overweight (BMI of 40 and above)

Are severely mentally ill

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 There is variation in uptake between age groups, however, with five per cent of those offered the vaccine aged 30-49 deciding not to receive it, compared to two per cent for the 50-69s and less than one per cent for the over-70s. 

Furthermore, Professor Anthony Harnden, the deputy chair of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), has said the uptake of the coronavirus jab among care home staff remains 'far too low'.

Prof Harnden said that nationally only 66% of care home staff had taken up the offer of a first dose.

'If they are to stop potentially transmitting to those vulnerable people who they look after and care for deeply, they need to take the immunisation up. The message needs to come across loud and clear,' he told the BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

However, he rejected suggestions that the vaccine could be made compulsory among staff if they wanted to carry on working in care homes.

'I would much prefer to be able to persuade by the power of argument than to force people or to make people lose their jobs because they didn't take up the vaccine.' 

His comments come as the Government launches a fresh drive to encourage people to accept a vaccine amid continuing reluctance among some groups.

Ministers are confident they will achieve their UK-wide target of getting an offer of a vaccine to those most at risk from the virus - including all over 70s - by Monday's deadline.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he hoped a combination of vaccines and new treatments will mean Covid-19 could be a 'treatable disease' by the end of the year.

However, there is concern in Government at the rate of vaccine uptake among some communities - including some ethnic minorities.

Mr Hancock issued a direct appeal to anyone over 70 who has still not had the jab to contact the NHS over the weekend to book an appointment.

'I am determined that we protect as many of our country's most vulnerable people from this awful disease as soon as possible,' he said. 'Vaccines are the way out of this pandemic.'

NHS England said the top four priority groups in England - people aged 70 and over, care home residents and staff, health and care workers and clinically extremely vulnerable patients - 'have now been offered the opportunity to be vaccinated', while Wales said those groups had been reached.

NHS England said people aged 65 to 69 can now get a vaccine if GPs have supplies, while Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford said they had already begun contacting some over 50s.

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has said she expects many in the 65-69 age group to have had their first jab by the middle of this month after the vast majority of older people were vaccinated.

In Northern Ireland, the Department of Health is offering everyone over 65 a vaccine by the end of February as it works its way through priority groups four and five, although it is expected to help the UK meet its overall target.

Fresh Government drive to encourage people to accept jabs

The Government has launched a fresh drive to encourage people to accept a vaccine amid continuing reluctance among some groups.

Ministers are confident they will achieve their UK-wide target of getting an offer of a vaccine to those most at risk from the virus - including all over 70s - by Monday's deadline.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he hoped a combination of vaccines and new treatments will mean Covid-19 could be a 'treatable disease' by the end of the year.

However, there is concern in Government at the rate of vaccine uptake among some communities - including some ethnic minorities.

Mr Hancock issued a direct appeal to anyone over 70 who has still not had the jab to contact the NHS over the weekend to book an appointment.

'I am determined that we protect as many of our country's most vulnerable people from this awful disease as soon as possible,' he said. 'Vaccines are the way out of this pandemic.'

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After that, the jab will be offered to people in priority group six, which is made up of those aged between 16 and 64 who have serious underlying health conditions.

This latter group, made up of some 7.3 million people, includes patients with conditions varying from morbid obesity, dementia and arthritis. 

Overall, uptake of the vaccine has been high, with the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) reporting a 93% take-up rate among the over 75s in England.

The DHSC is now seeking to work with community organisations and charities in England to address the concerns that are making some reluctant to get the jab, while seeking to dispel 'myths' circulating on social media.

At the same time it is looking to raise awareness of how the vaccines are being made generally available, especially among ethnic minorities, homeless people, asylum seekers and those with disabilities.

Around 30 ministers are taking part in visits and virtual meetings, including Home Secretary Priti Patel and Vaccines Minister Nadhim Zahawi.

'We recognise that some groups feel more hesitant about getting a jab, or have more barriers, both physical and mental, preventing them from accessing one when it's offered,' Mr Zahawi said.

Mr Hancock, meanwhile, expressed the hope that coronavirus will become 'another illness that we have to live with' like flu.

'I hope that Covid-19 will become a treatable disease by the end of the year,' Mr Hancock told The Daily Telegraph.

'If Covid-19 ends up like flu, so we live our normal lives and we mitigate through vaccines and treatments, then we can get on with everything again.'

Danny Altmann, professor of immunology at Imperial College London, said he agreed with the Health Secretary's comments about the UK potentially living with coronavirus in the future in the same way as the flu.

Matt Hancock said he hoped Covid-19 will become a treatable disease by the end of the year.

Prof Altmann told Times Radio: 'I agree with the 'by the end of the year' part, I think the jury's out on what the future will look like.'

On news of the number of coronavirus patients in hospitals going down, he said: 'We're all following the data in the UK and from Israel, who are a little bit ahead of the curve in terms of vaccinations, and seeing those transmission graphs absolutely being quashed.

'We can't easily pick apart how much of that is lockdown, how much is vaccination, but it's certainly both of those things.

'I am cautiously optimistic that we are winning finally.'

The move comes as it was announced on Friday that more than 14 million across the UK have now received their first dose of one of the approved vaccines.  

Covid deaths among over-85s plummet by 41% - almost twice as fast as un-vaccinated people over-65s 

The number of Covid deaths in over-85s is falling twice as fast it is in younger Brits, raising hopes that the UK's vaccine drive is clicking into gear, with just one per cent of the population refusing jabs.

The Government's target of administering 15 million doses is set to be hit this weekend, amid a backdrop of falling cases and deaths, with pressure growing on Boris Johnson to present his 'roadmap' out of lockdown.

The supreme efforts of volunteers over recent weeks now appears to be paying dividends, with the number of fatalities among the oldest age group now falling on average by some 41 per cent a week.

By contrast, the number of weekly deaths is falling by 22 per cent for those aged under 65.  

Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter, a risk expert from the University of Cambridge, told the Sun: 'There is a statistically significant difference between the age groups. A substantial amount of this difference will be vaccines.

'And, by the end of the month, it's going to be quite dramatic. It is quite tricky to spot as deaths are falling everywhere — it's just that in older groups the drop is much faster than others.'

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2021-02-14 07:59:00Z
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Sabtu, 13 Februari 2021

Undersea tunnel between Britain and Northern Ireland could be approved within weeks - Daily Mail

Undersea tunnel between Britain and Northern Ireland could be approved within weeks amid hopes project dubbed ‘Boris’ Burrow’ could ease post-Brexit trade tensions

  • 'Boris' Burrow' would be a 25mile tunnel connecting Northern Ireland & Scotland
  • A decision on the project proposal is expected to be released within weeks
  • Hopes to ease trade between UK & Northern Ireland following Brexit transition
  • A connection between Scotland and Northern Ireland proposed by PM in 2018 

An undersea tunnel connecting Britain with Northern Ireland could get the go ahead within weeks amid hopes the project, dubbed 'Boris' Burrow', could ease post-Brexit tensions. 

It is hoped the tunnel will help facilitate trade between Northern Ireland and the UK following a series of stumbling blocks as a result of Brexit

The tunnel, which would be a similar length to the Channel tunnel, would run from Stranraer, Scotland, to Larne, Northern Ireland, The Telegraph reports.

Studies are currently being undertaken by the chairman of Network Rail, Peter Hendy, to find out if the 25-mile tunnel would be possible. 

He has already met the Prime Minster to discuss his findings and his report is expected to be released within a matter of weeks.

Plans for 25-mile tunnel connecting Stranraer, Scotland, and Larne, Northern Ireland, is expected to get the go ahead within a matter of weeks

Plans for 25-mile tunnel connecting Stranraer, Scotland, and Larne, Northern Ireland, is expected to get the go ahead within a matter of weeks

It is believed to have been modelled on the Channel tunnel, connecting the UK and France, which accommodates both trains, cars and HGVS, The Times reports.

Tensions have been mounting since the Brexit transition period came to an end over the New Year and the EU subsequently introduced checks on cargo entering Northern Ireland by ferry, disrupting its trade with the UK. 

While discussions for the proposed tunnel rumble on, Michael Gove is believed to be proposing a 'mutual enforcement' plan. 

His plan would see the Northern Irish border restored and the same checks applied to both UK and EU trade.

But officials are said to have acknowledged an alteration to the Northern Ireland protocol is unlikely. 

As part of Brexit negotiations, the UK and EU agreed to the Northern Ireland protocol which is designed to avoid the need for a border on the island of Ireland. 

But this has led to disruption on goods crossing the Irish Sea, with new checks imposed on those moving from Britain to the province.

Since the arrangements came into force on January 1, supermarkets have reported empty shelves while concerns have been raised that Northern Ireland’s place within the UK is being undermined. 

Network Rail, Peter Hendy, has been looking into whether the 25-mile tunnel would be possible and has already met with the Prime Minster (pictured) to discuss his findings

Network Rail, Peter Hendy, has been looking into whether the 25-mile tunnel would be possible and has already met with the Prime Minster (pictured) to discuss his findings

Amid growing tensions, graffiti has been daubed on buildings and checks at ports have been suspended following threats against staff. 

At Prime Minister's Questions yesterday, Mr Johnson said he would take the drastic step of suspending parts of the Brexit agreement unless the problems can be resolved in crisis talks with the EU.

The Government has demanded some checks are removed, while existing grace periods on goods such as chilled meats are extended until 2023.

It is expected the Network Rail chairman, Mr Hendy, will advise the Government to set up a feasibility study for the tunnel.

A link between Scotland and Northern Ireland was first proposed by Boris Johnson during the Tory leadership race in 2018 in the form of a bridge. 

‘What we need to do is build a bridge between our islands,’ he declared, during an interview that was highly critical of Theresa May’s leadership. 

Michael Gove (pictured) is believed to be proposing a 'mutual enforcement' plan which would see the Northern Irish border restored and the same checks applied to both UK and EU trade

Michael Gove (pictured) is believed to be proposing a 'mutual enforcement' plan which would see the Northern Irish border restored and the same checks applied to both UK and EU trade

The tunnel which would run from Stranraer, Scotland, to Larne, Northern Ireland, would be a similar length to the Channel tunnel (pictured)

The tunnel which would run from Stranraer, Scotland, to Larne, Northern Ireland, would be a similar length to the Channel tunnel

‘Why don’t we? Why don’t we? There is so much more we can do, and what grieves me about the current approach to Brexit is that we are just in danger of not believing in ourselves, not believing in Britain.’ 

At the time the proposal was ridiculed by some but it appears the suggestion could become a reality.  

Both he and Scottish Secretary Alister Jack are believed to be firm supporters of the plans which are said to be similar to the 23.5mile deep Channel tunnel. 

Speaking the Telegraph's Chopper's Politics podcast, Mr Jack explained a tunnel was the preferred option because 'a bridge would be closed for probably 100 days a year with the weather in the Irish Sea'. 

When first proposed there were also concerns about Beautfort's Dyke, a trench in the North Channel where tons of munitions were dumped after the Second World War, and whether it would be logistically plausible.  

DUP MP Sammy Wilson said: 'This kind of project would at least give people in Northern Ireland the belief that the Government was prepared to put in infrastructure and spend money to make sure that we are physically connected.'

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2021-02-14 01:28:00Z
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