Lockdown remains until care home crisis and testing resolved – PM

This was Boris Johnson during his 10 Downing Street address.This was Boris Johnson during his 10 Downing Street address.
This was Boris Johnson during his 10 Downing Street address. | Crown Copyright
BORIS Johnson warned last night that the UK lockdown will remain in place until the Covid-19 “epidemic” in care homes is under control.

The Prime Minister also reiterated the need for “world-beating” testing as he set out a conditional three-point “roadmap” to “reopen society” once the pandemic is brought under greater control.

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But there was no date from Mr Johnson on when it will be safe for families separated by the virus to be reunited after confirming that “it is not the time simply to end the lockdown this week”.

He also made a direct appeal for national unity after the leaders of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland’s said that the Government’s new ‘stay alert, control the virus, save lives’ message was too vague.

Boris Johnson during last night's televised address.Boris Johnson during last night's televised address.
Boris Johnson during last night's televised address. | Crown Copyright

They all said that they would be reiterating the ‘stay at home’ mantra that has been in place since Mr Johnson first addressed the nation seven weeks ago and put the shutdown in place.

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Mr Johnson, who described the virus as “the most vicious threat this country has faced in my lifetime”, will set out his plans in more detail to Parliament today after another 269 deaths took the UK-wide death toll to 31,855. This was, however, the lowest daily increase since March 29.

The PM did say rules on outdoor activity will be relaxed from Wednesday, but that people will face tougher fines if they flout social distancing rules.

He hopes that some shops, and primary schools, will be able to reopen by June 1 “at the earliest” and that this could be extended, in phase three, to parts of the hospitality industry from July if the re-infection rate falls still further.

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Boris Johnson during his 10 Downing Street address.Boris Johnson during his 10 Downing Street address.
Boris Johnson during his 10 Downing Street address. | Crown Copyright

“We will be driven not by mere hope or economic necessity. We are going to be driven by the science, the data and public health,” he vowed.

“We must reverse rapidly the awful epidemics in care homes and in the NHS, and though the numbers are coming down sharply now, there is plainly much more to be done.

“And if we are to control this virus, then we must have a world-beating system for testing potential victims, and for tracing their contacts.”

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This was a tacit admission that the Government’s target to test at least 100,000 people a day for the virus by the end of April has not been successful. No mention was made of Mr Johnson’s desire for 200,000 daily tests.

However the PM said the Government’s new protocols will be able to “detect local flare-ups” as he set out the first tentative proposals to assist employers as Britain faces up to the the deepest recession in history.

“We now need to stress that anyone who can’t work from home, for instance those in construction or manufacturing, should be actively encouraged to go to work,” he added.

Lack of clarity criticised by senior Labour politicians

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BORIS JOHNSON was accused of issuing “mixed messages” by two senior Labour politicians.

“The Prime Minister’s statement runs the risk of muddying the message to the British public when clarity is critical,” said Sheffield City Region mayor Dan Jarvis.

“We have already seen social distancing measures start to fray in some places over the weekend. The vague instruction to ‘stay alert’ is only going to make that worse.”

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Meanwhile Leeds West MP Rachel Reeves accused the PM of “telling millions of people to go back to work” without offering them “a clear plan for their safety or how they are to return without relying on public transport”.

The Shadow Cabinet member added: “I would urge the Government to work with employers, the unions and employees to design a much clearer plan for how we can emerge from lockdown.”

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