Senin, 15 Februari 2021

Covid-19: PM urges 'optimistic but patient approach' to pandemic - BBC News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson
PA Media

People must be "optimistic but patient" about the coronavirus situation in the UK and the end to restrictions, Boris Johnson has said.

The PM hailed the vaccine rollout, but warned that now was not the time to "relax".

He said there were still more people in hospital than at the peak of the first wave, and steps taken to ease lockdown should be "cautious but irreversible".

He is to set out a roadmap next week for lifting England's restrictions.

It comes after No 10 said it had hit its target to offer a jab to the UK's 15 million most vulnerable people.

Speaking at Monday's Downing Street briefing, Mr Johnson hailed the "unprecedented national achievement" of hitting the target to offer a vaccine to everyone in the top four priority groups, but warned the threat from the virus remained "very real".

The prime minister warned that the government did not have all the "hard facts" about how the vaccine impacted infections and that there were still more people in hospital with Covid-19 than in April - with admissions running at 1,600 a day across the UK.

"We have to keep our foot to the floor," he said.

Mr Johnson said no decisions were being taken ahead of the unveiling of his roadmap out of England's restrictions, but said the government wanted this lockdown "to be the last", with "cautious but irreversible" progress.

He added that although he was "increasingly optimistic" he could not give "an absolute cast-iron guarantee that we won't face further difficulties".

"I don't want people to think I'm not optimistic. There's been a big change - science is now in the ascendency over the disease," he added.

Mr Johnson also said the government was looking at introducing rapid lateral flow testing for venues such as nightclubs and some theatres that were unable to open last year.

"I think that, in combination with vaccination, will probably be the route forward," he said.

Michael Kill, chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association, said the "acknowledgement" would give late night businesses "the opportunity to deliver pilot schemes which will substantiate the ability for this sector to open safely at the appropriate time".

"But more importantly we will be able to plan and prepare for that opportunity," he added.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Jessica Parker, political correspondent

Could this be the last lockdown?

That is, of course, a huge shared hope and the government's stated aim.

It will soon be exactly a year since the first lockdown was brought in.

Who knew then that we'd be in a third period of national restrictions 12 months later?

Boris Johnson has been accused, at times, of over-promising and under-delivering during this crisis.

Today, again, he's urging caution - even as case rates fall and the vaccine rollout goes well.

That's because ministers really don't want to lift restrictions only to reimpose them again on a weary nation.

2px presentational grey line

It comes after more than 60 Conservative MPs wrote to Mr Johnson over the weekend, calling for a commitment to a "free life" and ending of lockdown measures before May.

Steve Baker, the deputy chair of the lockdown-sceptic Covid Research Group (CRG) of Tory MPs leading the call, said schools should return on 8 March, hospitality should reopen by Easter and all other elements should be back to normal by 1 May - when all people in the top nine priority groups have been offered a vaccine.

Earlier, No 10 said the intention was to "start getting" pupils back into school on 8 March, but was not ruling out the possibility that they could be sent back in stages.

The PM's official spokesman said it was "important" the planned review of restrictions was carried out this week, with details to be set out in Mr Johnson's road map on Monday.

The spokesman added that he would not "pre-empt" what the road map might contain, but added: "it remains our priority to get kids back to school and we always said we want that to start from 8 March, if the science and evidence allows".

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
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The government is hoping to offer a jab to everyone in the first nine priority groups - including everyone over the age of 50 - by the end of April, Mr Johnson said.

This would run alongside giving second doses within the 12-week window to those in the top four priority groups, who have already had a first dose.

All those aged between 16 and 64 with underlying health conditions, as well as adult carers, are being contacted with the offer of a vaccination.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Nick Triggle, health correspondent

With every day that passes, it becomes clearer and clearer that the UK is winning its fight against Covid.

Science, as Boris Johnson said, is in the ascendancy.

It is easy to forget this virus only emerged just over a year ago.

But now the UK has approved three vaccines for use - two of which have already started to be rolled out at speed. Another two are being assessed by the regulator after promising trial results.

There is confidence the mutations, while presenting a challenge, can be overcome. Plans are already being made to update the vaccines if needed to work better against new variants.

No vaccine is 100% effective and some people may choose not to take it. That's why advances in treatment are vital, too.

A cheap steroid, dexamethasone, is being widely used to improve the survival rates of the sickest patients. And last week it emerged an arthritis drug, tocilizumab, could also further improve survival chances.

There is still a long way to go, but there is a cautious belief in both Westminster and among scientists that each step made from now on should be forward not back.

2px presentational grey line

Speaking at the same Downing Street briefing, NHS England's chief executive Sir Simon Stevens described the vaccine rollout as "two sprints and a marathon".

He said the UK had passed the "finishing line of the first sprint, and now we've got a second sprint between now and 30 April to extend the number of vaccinations given to the higher risk groups of the population, before then moving on to the marathon, which will be vaccination for everybody in the country who is eligible" alongside the winter flu campaign and further booster shots if needed.

On Monday, the UK recorded another 9,765 new coronavirus infections, according to the latest government figures. It is the first time the daily cases figure has been under 10,000 since 2 October.

A further 230 deaths within 28 days of a positive test were also recorded. Fewer deaths tend to be reported on Mondays due to a reporting lag over the weekend.

Chart showing latest UK coronavirus data

In other developments:

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2021-02-15 20:46:00Z
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Covid-19: PM urges 'optimistic but patient approach' to pandemic - BBC News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson
PA Media

People must be "optimistic but patient" about the coronavirus situation in the UK and the end to restrictions, Boris Johnson has said.

The PM hailed the vaccine rollout, but warned that now was not the time to "relax".

He said there were still more people in hospital than at the peak of the first wave, and steps taken to ease lockdown should be "cautious but irreversible".

He is to set out a roadmap next week for lifting England's restrictions.

It comes after No 10 said it had hit its target to offer a jab to the UK's 15 million most vulnerable people.

Speaking at Monday's Downing Street briefing, Mr Johnson hailed the "unprecedented national achievement" of hitting the target to offer a vaccine to everyone in the top four priority groups, but warned the threat from the virus remained "very real".

The prime minister warned that the government did not have all the "hard facts" about how the vaccine impacted infections and that there were still more people in hospital with Covid-19 than in April - with admissions running at 1,600 a day across the UK.

"We have to keep our foot to the floor," he said.

Mr Johnson said no decisions were being taken ahead of the unveiling of his roadmap out of England's restrictions, but said the government wanted this lockdown "to be the last", with "cautious but irreversible" progress.

He added that although he was "increasingly optimistic" he could not give "an absolute cast-iron guarantee that we won't face further difficulties".

"I don't want people to think I'm not optimistic. There's been a big change - science is now in the ascendency over the disease," he added.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Jessica Parker, political correspondent

Could this be the last lockdown?

That is, of course, a huge shared hope and the government's stated aim.

It will soon be exactly a year since the first lockdown was brought in.

Who knew then that we'd be in a third period of national restrictions 12 months later?

Boris Johnson has been accused, at times, of over-promising and under-delivering during this crisis.

Today, again, he's urging caution - even as case rates fall and the vaccine rollout goes well.

That's because ministers really don't want to lift restrictions only to reimpose them again on a weary nation.

2px presentational grey line

It comes after more than 60 Conservative MPs wrote to Mr Johnson over the weekend, calling for a commitment to a "free life" and ending of lockdown measures before May.

Steve Baker, the deputy chair of the lockdown-sceptic Covid Research Group (CRG) of Tory MPs leading the call, said schools should return on 8 March, hospitality should reopen by Easter and all other elements should be back to normal by 1 May - when all people in the top nine priority groups have been offered a vaccine.

Earlier, No 10 said the intention was to "start getting" pupils back into school on 8 March, but was not ruling out the possibility that they could be sent back in stages.

The PM's official spokesman said it was "important" the planned review of restrictions was carried out this week, with details to be set out in Mr Johnson's road map on Monday.

The spokesman added that he would not "pre-empt" what the road map might contain, but added: "it remains our priority to get kids back to school and we always said we want that to start from 8 March, if the science and evidence allows".

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

The government is hoping to offer a jab to everyone in the first nine priority groups - including everyone over the age of 50 - by the end of April, Mr Johnson said.

This would run alongside giving second doses within the 12-week window to those in the top four priority groups, who have already had a first dose.

All those aged between 16 and 64 with underlying health conditions, as well as adult carers, are being contacted with the offer of a vaccination.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Nick Triggle, health correspondent

With every day that passes, it becomes clearer and clearer that the UK is winning its fight against Covid.

Science, as Boris Johnson said, is in the ascendancy.

It is easy to forget this virus only emerged just over a year ago.

But now the UK has approved three vaccines for use - two of which have already started to be rolled out at speed. Another two are being assessed by the regulator after promising trial results.

There is confidence the mutations, while presenting a challenge, can be overcome. Plans are already being made to update the vaccines if needed to work better against new variants.

No vaccine is 100% effective and some people may choose not to take it. That's why advances in treatment are vital, too.

A cheap steroid, dexamethasone, is being widely used to improve the survival rates of the sickest patients. And last week it emerged an arthritis drug, tocilizumab, could also further improve survival chances.

There is still a long way to go, but there is a cautious belief in both Westminster and among scientists that each step made from now on should be forward not back.

2px presentational grey line

Speaking at the same Downing Street briefing, NHS England's chief executive Sir Simon Stevens described the vaccine rollout as "two sprints and a marathon".

He said the UK had passed the "finishing line of the first sprint, and now we've got a second sprint between now and 30 April to extend the number of vaccinations given to the higher risk groups of the population, before then moving on to the marathon, which will be vaccination for everybody in the country who is eligible" alongside the winter flu campaign and further booster shots if needed.

On Monday, the UK recorded another 9,765 new coronavirus infections, according to the latest government figures. It is the first time the daily cases figure has been under 10,000 since 2 October.

A further 230 deaths within 28 days of a positive test were also recorded. Fewer deaths tend to be reported on Mondays due to a reporting lag over the weekend.

Chart showing latest UK coronavirus data

In other developments:

Around the BBC - Sounds
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2021-02-15 19:35:00Z
52781366716199

Covid-19: PM urges 'optimistic but patient approach' to pandemic - BBC News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson
PA Media

People must be "optimistic but patient" about the coronavirus situation in the UK and the end to restrictions, Boris Johnson has said.

The PM hailed the "achievement" of the vaccine rollout, but warned that now was not the time to relax.

He said he would set out a roadmap next week, providing a "route to normality" to move England out of lockdown.

It comes after No 10 said it had hit its target to offer a jab to the UK's 15 million most vulnerable people.

Speaking at Monday's Downing Street briefing, Mr Johnson hailed the "unprecedented national achievement" of hitting the target to offer a vaccine to everyone in the top four priority groups, but warned it was "no moment to relax" because the threat from the virus remained "very real".

The prime minister warned that the government did not have all the "hard facts" about how the vaccine impacted infections and that there were still more people in hospital with Covid-19 than at the peak of the first wave in April - with admissions running at 1,600 a day across the UK.

"We have to keep our foot to the floor," he said.

Mr Johnson said no decisions were being taken ahead of the unveiling of his roadmap out of England's restrictions, but said the government wanted this lockdown "to be the last", with "cautious but irreversible" progress.

He added that although he was "increasingly optimistic" he could not give "an absolute cast-iron guarantee that we won't face further difficulties".

"I don't want people to think I'm not optimistic. There's been a big change - science is now in the ascendency over the disease," he added.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Jessica Parker, political correspondent

Could this be the last lockdown?

That is, of course, a huge shared hope and the government's stated aim.

It will soon be exactly a year since the first lockdown was brought in.

Who knew then that we'd be in a third period of national restrictions 12 months later?

Boris Johnson has been accused, at times, of over-promising and under-delivering during this crisis.

Today, again, he's urging caution - even as case rates fall and the vaccine rollout goes well.

That's because ministers really don't want to lift restrictions only to reimpose them again on a weary nation.

2px presentational grey line

It comes after more than 60 Conservative MPs wrote to Mr Johnson over the weekend, calling for a commitment to a "free life" and ending of lockdown measures before May.

Steve Baker, the deputy chair of the lockdown-sceptic Covid Research Group (CRG) of Tory MPs leading the call, said schools should return on 8 March, hospitality should reopen by Easter and all other elements should be back to normal by 1 May - when all people in the top nine priority groups have been offered a vaccine.

Earlier, No 10 said the intention is to "start getting" pupils back into school on 8 March, but was not ruling out the possibility that they could be sent back in stages.

The PM's official spokesman said it was "important" the planned review of restrictions was carried out this week, with details to be set out in Mr Johson's road map on Monday.

The spokesman added that he would not "pre-empt" what the road map might contain, but added: "it remains our priority to get kids back to school and we always said we want that to start from 8 March, if the science and evidence allows".

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

The government is hoping to offer a jab to everyone in the first nine priority groups - including everyone over the age of 50 - by the end of April, Mr Johnson said.

This would run alongside giving second doses within the 12-week window to those in the top four priority groups, who have already had a first dose.

All those aged between 16 and 64 with underlying health conditions, as well as adult carers, are being contacted with the offer of a vaccination.

Speaking at the same Downing Street briefing, NHS England's chief executive Sir Simon Stevens described the vaccine rollout as "two sprints and a marathon".

He said the UK had passed the "finishing line of the first sprint, and now we've got a second sprint between now and 30 April to extend the number of vaccinations given to the higher risk groups of the population, before then moving on to the marathon, which will be vaccination for everybody in the country who is eligible" alongside the winter flu campaign and further booster shots if needed.

On Monday, the UK recorded another 9,765 new coronavirus infections, according to the latest government figures. It is the first time the daily cases figure has been under 10,000 since 2 October.

A further 230 deaths within 28 days of a positive test were also recorded. Fewer deaths tend to be reported on Mondays due to a reporting lag over the weekend.

Chart showing latest UK coronavirus data

In other developments:

Around the BBC - Sounds
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2021-02-15 19:20:00Z
52781366716199

COVID-19: 'We want this lockdown to be the last', says Boris Johnson as he plans for 'irreversible' easing of coronavirus restrictions - Sky News

Boris Johnson has set out his hope the current COVID lockdown will be the last thanks to the "unprecedented" vaccine rollout - but admitted he can't offer "an absolute cast iron guarantee".

Speaking at a Downing Street news conference, the prime minister hailed the "astonishing efforts" of everyone involved in the delivery of COVID jabs after the government met its target of offering a first dose to 15 million of the most vulnerable.

He praised the "unprecedented national achievement", but said that now was "no moment to relax" as the vaccine rollout moves on to the next five priority groups.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

A bus decorated with a rainbow and NHS stickers passes a Coronavirus related advert on a billboard in Falkirk, Central Scotland, where lockdown measures introduced on January 5 for mainland Scotland remain in effect until at least the end of February. Picture date: Monday February 8, 2021.
Image: The PM set out his hope of 'cautious but also irreversible' easing of lockdown restrictions

Mr Johnson reiterated his intention to set out, on 22 February, how England's third national lockdown will be eased and said the public "must be both optimistic but also patient".

"Next week I'll be setting out a roadmap saying as much as we possibly can about the route to normality, even though some things are very uncertain," he said.

"Because we want this lockdown to be the last and we want progress to be cautious but also irreversible.

More from Boris Johnson

"So please continue to stay at home, protect the NHS and save lives."

But the prime minister later said that, while he was "increasingly optimistic" about the possibility of easing restrictions, he couldn't guarantee the current lockdown would be the last ever.

"I'm very hopeful that we'll be able to go ahead and open things up, but to say I can give an absolute cast iron guarantee that we won't face further difficulties and have to think harder and deeper about some problems, no at this stage I can't," he said.

Mr Johnson also urged people to take reports on how and when lockdown restrictions might be eased "with a pinch of salt".

"The data becomes clearer with every day that passes and we have to continue to evaluate," the prime minister said.

"And also, to be absolutely clear, these decisions we will take in the course of this week but they are not yet taken.

"And I would just humbly advise anybody reading accounts of what we are going to do... at such and such a time in the course of the next few months, to take them with a pinch of salt, folks, because this is still speculation."

Sir Simon Stevens, the chief executive of NHS England, said that reaching the first target of the UK's vaccination programme was "definitely not mission accomplished".

"I've described the vaccination campaign as two sprints and a marathon - we've just come through the finishing line of the first sprint," he said.

Sir Simon described the vaccination of the next priority groups, including all over-50s, between now and the end of April as the "second sprint".

And the "marathon" effort would involve "vaccination for everybody in the country who's eligible, as well as the winter flu campaign and, potentially, further COVID booster shots this autumn".

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Sir Simon also said the next phase of the UK's vaccination programme - for more than 14 million of the next most vulnerable - would see "pretty substantial ramp-up" in the number of jabs given.

"In this next phase, this second sprint, actually we're going to be vaccinating a larger number of people than in the first sprint," he added.

"And, overall, although supply will vary week to week and we'll have to adjust accordingly, we may be giving up to twice as many vaccinations overall - given we've got to be doing the second doses as well - than we've done in the first sprint."

England's chief medical officer, Professor Chris Whitty, said the COVID rates were "definitely heading in the right direction", but he highlighted how there are still more people currently in hospital with coronavirus than at the peak of last spring's first wave of infections.

Earlier on Monday, it was announced the UK had recorded another 230 deaths within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test.

Another 9,765 people had tested positive for COVID-19 in the latest government figures, with more than 15.3 million people having now received the first dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

As of last Thursday, there were more than 23,000 COVID patients in UK hospitals.

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2021-02-15 19:18:45Z
52781366716199

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to do primetime TV interview with Oprah - Daily Mail

So much for privacy! Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to sit down with close friend Oprah for a 'wide-ranging' and 'intimate' primetime TV interview that will cover 'everything' from their royal exit to marriage and pregnancy

  • CBS revealed on Monday morning that it will air the 90-minute special 'Oprah with Meghan and Harry' on March 7
  • A statement from the network revealed that the interview will focus on Meghan, 39, who will discuss a variety of topics, including motherhood and marriage 
  • She will also discuss what it was like to 'step into life as a royal' and how she is 'handling life under intense public pressure' 
  • Oprah and Meghan will then be joined by Harry, 36, who will discuss the couple's move to the US and their 'hopes and dreams for their expanding family' 
  • The news of the interview comes just one day after the couple revealed they are expecting their second child 
  • Harry and Meghan's decision to sit down for such an 'intimate' interview is at odds with their continued pleas for privacy 

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are set to sit down for a 'wide-ranging' and 'intimate' TV interview with Oprah that will cover everything from their latest pregnancy and marriage to their exit from the royal family

The 90-minute primetime special, entitled 'Oprah with Meghan and Harry', will air on CBS on March 7, and will focus primarily on the Duchess of Sussex who will discuss 'everything from stepping into life as a Royal, marriage, motherhood, philanthropic work to how she is handling life under intense public pressure'.

Prince Harry will then join his wife in front of the camera, and the two will open up about their decision to move to the US following Megxit, and their 'hopes and dreams for their expanding family', a CBS spokesperson revealed.

The interview is the latest in a line of carefully-planned publicity moves from the couple and the announcement comes less than 24 hours after the Duke and Duchess of Sussex announced that they are expecting their second child.     

Meghan and Harry's decision to record an interview with Oprah is unsurprising given their close friendship with the TV host, who was a guest at their 2018 wedding in London, and now lives just a short distance from the couple's $14.5 million Montecito mansion.  

Opening up: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will sit down for a primetime TV interview with Oprah, it has been announced, one day after they revealed they are expecting a second child

Opening up: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will sit down for a primetime TV interview with Oprah, it has been announced, one day after they revealed they are expecting a second child 

Connections: It will likely come as no surprise that the couple have chosen to speak with Oprah, 67, who is a close friend of the couple and was a guest at their 2018 wedding

Connections: It will likely come as no surprise that the couple have chosen to speak with Oprah, 67, who is a close friend of the couple and was a guest at their 2018 wedding 

In December, the TV mogul made clear her close relationship with the couple when she promoted Meghan's new range of vegan coffee in an Instagram post that is estimated to have been worth $1 million in free publicity.

However, their decision to take part in such an 'intimate' interview is certainly at odds with the couple's ongoing insistence that they wish to maintain complete privacy. 

What is clear is that this interview will likely be the couple's most candid yet, with a statement from CBS promising that Meghan and Harry will open up about a variety of hot-button topics - perhaps most significantly their exit from the royal family in January 2020, and the Duchess's views on what it was like to 'step into royal life'.  

'Winfrey will speak with Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex, in a wide-ranging interview, covering everything from stepping into life as a Royal, marriage, motherhood, philanthropic work to how she is handling life under intense public pressure,' a CBS press release revealed. 

'Later, the two are joined by Prince Harry as they speak about their move to the United States and their future hopes and dreams for their expanding family.' 

The interview will be the first time that either Meghan or Harry have addressed Megxit directly in a public forum; thus far the couple have remained silent about their reasons for leaving the royal family - despite both waxing lyrical about their new life in Los Angeles during several public appearances. 

Opening up: According to CBS the couple will open up about a number of sensitive topics, including Meghan's entry into the royal family, and their decision to quit royal life for the US

Opening up: According to CBS the couple will open up about a number of sensitive topics, including Meghan's entry into the royal family, and their decision to quit royal life for the US  

Close: The TV mogul lives a short distance from the couple's $14.5 million Montecito home, and recently promoted a coffee brand that Meghan has invested in on Instagram (pictured)

Close: The TV mogul lives a short distance from the couple's $14.5 million Montecito home, and recently promoted a coffee brand that Meghan has invested in on Instagram (pictured)  

Meghan's decision to discuss her experiences of royal life may also be cause for concern from the Queen and her aides, particularly given that the Duchess has already stated in court documents that she felt 'unprotected by the [royal] institution' during her pregnancy - and claimed that she was 'prohibited from defending herself' against stories published in the media. 

The choice to broadcast the interview on CBS is surprising, given that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex inked a very lucrative deal with Netflix just last year in a move that is believed to have earned the couple up to $150 million.    

Their partnership with Netflix sparked furious controversy - and further questions about the legitimacy of their pleas for privacy - particularly given that the streaming site is responsible for The Crown, which delved into the very private life of Harry's mother Princess Diana in its most recent season.

Although the fourth season of the show did not premiere until several weeks after Harry and Meghan's Netflix deal was revealed to the public, it had already been widely publicized that it would cover Diana's heartbreaking battle with bulimia in great detail, as well as her turbulent relationship with Prince Charles.   

Guest role? It is not yet known whether the couple's son, Archie, will make an appearance during the interview, and CBS refused to comment on any other details about the sit-down

Guest role? It is not yet known whether the couple's son, Archie, will make an appearance during the interview, and CBS refused to comment on any other details about the sit-down 

It is understood that such a public and dramatized depiction of such a private matter caused great 'discomfort' for Prince William, and many other senior members of the royal family, with one source revealing in September last year that Harry's partnership with Netflix had created yet further tension between him and his brother. 

'William and other senior royals are incredibly uncomfortable about this drama and livid Harry is now in partnership with the company that's airing it,' the insider told The Sun

Details of the couple's Netflix partnership were kept closely guarded, with the streaming site only revealing that the deal included a wide range of content, from documentaries and children's programming to feature films. 

Oprah also boasts her own multi-year streaming partnership with Apple TV+, on which she recently streamed an interview with former President Barack Obama.  

Harry and Meghan have mirrored many of the Obamas' post-White House deals, following in their footsteps by inking multi-million-dollar deals first with Netflix and then with Spotify, just as the former President and First Lady had already done.   

It is unclear whether the interview has already been filmed, or it location; a CBS spokesperson refused to comment, telling DailyMail.com: 'We have no further information at this time.'

The network has also not revealed whether Harry and Meghan's son Archie will make an appearance during the 90-minute interview.  

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2021-02-15 16:48:00Z
52781366555905

COVID-19: Boris Johnson rules out 'vaccine passports' for trips to pub - Sky News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he has no plans to introduce so-called vaccine passports for activities like going to the pub.

Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock told Sky News the UK government was working with other countries to investigate whether coronavirus immunity passports may be necessary in the future.

And speaking in London later on Monday, Mr Johnson said he felt it may become "inevitable" for such schemes to enable foreign travel to open up. But, he said he had no plans to introduce them for domestic activities.

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He added: "I think inevitably there will be great interest in ideas like can you show that you had a vaccination against COVID in the way that you sometimes have to show you have had a vaccination against yellow fever or other diseases in order to travel somewhere.

"I think that is going to be very much in the mix down the road, I think that is going to happen.

Boris Johnson
Image: Boris Johnson pictured today in south London

"What I don't think we will have in this country is - as it were - vaccination passports to allow you to go to, say, the pub or something like that."

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The prime minister also said he expected there to be an increase in "rapid testing" as more of the population is vaccinated.

Mr Johnson said: "Looking at the future, what we hope to have is such a high proportion of the population vaccinated that when you couple that with rapid testing - lateral flow testing - you really start to get the kind of answers that you're talking about.

"So I think it's in the context of ...having vaccinated a lot of the population, as we're already doing - and we'll do a lot more of in the next few months - that the rapid test approach will start, I think, to come into its own."

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2021-02-15 16:20:31Z
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