Pubs, restaurants, hotels to reopen in England early July, Latest World News - The New Paper
World

Pubs, restaurants, hotels to reopen in England early July

This article is more than 12 months old

British Prime Minister says businesses can reopen in early July after easing social distancing from 2m to 1m, with mask-wearing

LONDON: Prime Minister Boris Johnson said yesterday that pubs, restaurants and hotels could reopen in England early next month when the social distancing rule is relaxed, easing the coronavirus lockdown that has all but shut the economy.

Mr Johnson has been under pressure from businesses, especially in the hospitality sector, and from members of his governing Conservative Party to relax the lockdown, but until now he had resisted for fear of prompting a second wave.

Yesterday, he said that with infections rates falling and because of a belief that there was little threat now of a second wave of Covid-19 cases, he could reopen swathes of the economy and try to get life in England back to something like normal.

By relaxing the rule on social distancing from 2m to 1m, with mitigation such as wearing of masks and the use of protective screens, Mr Johnson said many businesses could reopen from July 4.

"Today we can say that our long, national hibernation is beginning to come to an end," he told Parliament.

"All hospitality indoors will be limited to table service and our guidance will encourage minimal staff and customer contact."

The changes will allow two households to meet in any setting and all schools will reopen in September, he said.

Hairdressers would be allowed to reopen along with places of worship, most leisure facilities and tourist attractions such as theme parks.

However, nightclubs, indoor gyms and swimming pools will stay closed.

Britain has one of the highest death tolls in the world from Covid-19, but the number of cases has been steadily falling.

Health officials on Monday reported 15 new deaths, the lowest rise since mid-March.

The daily tally of deaths peaked in April, when the toll exceeded 1,000 on nine days.

Mr Johnson had faced strong lobbying from the hospitality sector and political pressure in his own party to drop the 2m rule, with many businesses saying they would be forced to close unless it was eased to 1m, which is the minimum recommended by the World Health Organisation.

Mr Johnson said not all restrictions could be lifted at once and people would need to remain vigilant.

He cautioned that lockdown measures might need to be reintroduced if there was a second spike in virus cases.

"As we have seen in other countries there will be flare-ups, for which local measures will be needed," Mr Johnson said. "And we will not hesitate to apply the brakes and reintroduce restrictions, even at national level, if required."

He also said that any changes to the country's quarantine policy would be based on public health guidance and not a desire to open up the economy.

"We will have a policy on air bridges that is based on public health," he said.

Britain has a 14-day quarantine policy in place for arrivals into the country from abroad, but the government has said it is looking at "air bridges", which would allow restriction-free travel between countries with low infection rates. - REUTERS

coronavirus