VIDEO UK fights SECOND new Covid strain, PM Johnson ENLARGES Emergency Lockdown, UK Travel and Freight Banned By Many Countries

jward

passin' thru
That's the whole point of this BS...Total control and destruction of all small business. :mad:
Now to be fair that isn't the "whole" point: there's also the the establishment of universal incomes, mandating bans on any assemblages that folks might use to resist the take overs of their govs, livelihoods, and lives, a swelling of the ranks of the Braunhemd, among many other features... :dvl2:
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
I can buy Brexit as at least a partial excuse. This widespread flight will spread out supply demand from the population concentrated south and the highest "risk" areas - including London. And, like you say...give the public an alternative "shiny object" to be peeved about.

I recall maybe 4-5 weeks ago there was talk of a new strain, and it was purported to be more contagious, but less dangerous - lower morbidity/mortality. Then the reports disappeared from mainstream.
 

jward

passin' thru
As to how they're responding, it has widely been reported to be 70% more contagious, but I have not seen if it is a more severe, the same, or less severe variant- if that would even be possible to ascertain right now.
 

jward

passin' thru
Flights from UK canceled as health minister says new coronavirus variant is 'out of control'
By Amy Woodyatt, Taylor Barnes and Tara John, CNN

Updated 1:13 PM ET, Sun December 20, 2020
Christmas travellers at Heathrow airport, Heathrow, London, UK. Dec 20, 2020


Christmas travellers at Heathrow airport, Heathrow, London, UK. Dec 20, 2020
London (CNN)A growing number of European countries on Sunday halted flights from the UK following the discovery of a new variant of Covid-19, said by officials to spread faster than others.
The new strain of coronavirus, which prompted the UK government to impose a Tier 4 lockdown in London and southeastern England and tighten restrictions for all of England over the festive period, is "out of control," Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Sunday.
The Netherlands is banning all passenger flights coming from the United Kingdom from Sunday morning until the new year in order to minimize the risk of the new strain from spreading in the the country "as much as possible", the government said in a press release.
Boris Johnson is facing two hellish weeks. Critics fear his weak leadership could seriously harm the UK

Boris Johnson is facing two hellish weeks. Critics fear his weak leadership could seriously harm the UK

The Dutch government said the same variant of the virus had been detected in the Netherlands in a sample from a case from early December, and that it is conducting further investigations to determine if there are any other related cases.
Meanwhile, Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said that Belgium will block travelers from the UK for 24 hours on Monday as a "precautionary measure," though the ban could be extended if necessary.
"As a precautionary measure, we have decided to stop flights from the UK from midnight for a period of 24 hours, and just as importantly for our country, to do the same for the Eurostar (train) -- because that's actually the main way that people from the UK come into our country," he said, speaking to CNN affiliate VRT's Sunday morning news program "De Zevende Dag."
Italy will also suspend flights to and from the United Kingdom, according to Foreign Affairs Minister Luigi Di Maio on Sunday, who did not say when the ban would come into place, or for how long. The country will ban entry to anyone who has been in Britain in the past two weeks, Health Minister Roberto Speranza said on Facebook Sunday.
The Czech Republic imposed a mandatory 10-day quarantine on anyone arriving from the UK starting Sunday in response to the new coronavirus strain identified there, the Foreign Ministry announced.
Hancock said the new variant, which can spread faster than other strains but is not more dangerous, had to be controlled.
"The only way you can do that is by restricting social contacts and essentially, especially in Tier 4 areas, everybody needs to behave as if they may well have the virus and that is the way that we can get it under control and keep people safe," he said Sunday.
The United Kingdom on Sunday broke its daily coronavirus case record, recording 35,928 new cases.
Tough coronavirus restrictions
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Saturday broke the news that London and large parts of southern and eastern England, where cases are surging, would enter Tier 4 restrictions, similar to the lockdown seen in Spring -- just days after reiterating his pledge to relax rules over the Christmas period.
Johnson outlined that in Tier 4 areas under the toughest restrictions, there will be no possibility for household mixing over Christmas. In areas under lower alert levels in England, Scotland and Wales, mixing will now be permitted only on Christmas Day.
People wait on the concourse at Paddington Station in London after the announcement that the capital would soon move into Tier 4 Covid-19.


People wait on the concourse at Paddington Station in London after the announcement that the capital would soon move into Tier 4 Covid-19.
In a hastily called Saturday press conference, Johnson said that the strain of the virus appears to spread more easily, and may be up to 70% more transmissable than the earlier strain.
Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty said on Saturday that the new variant is responsible for 60% of infections in London, which have nearly doubled in the last week.
As with other new variants or strains of Covid-19, this one carries a genetic fingerprint that makes it easy to track, and it happens to be one that is now common. That does not mean the mutation has made it spread more easily, nor does it not necessarily mean this variation is more dangerous.
Multiple experts in the genetics and epidemiology of viruses are noting that this one could be just a "lucky" strain that's been amplified because of a superspreader event; it could be the mutation somehow makes it spread more easily without causing more serious illness; or it could just be by chance.
Still, the government's scientific advisory group for Covid-19 has also warned the new strain is a "real cause for concern," and called for urgent action. On Twitter, Jeremy Farrar said, "Research is ongoing to understand more, but acting urgently now is critical. There is no part of the UK & globally that should not be concerned. As in many countries, the situation is fragile."
The new variant of Covid-19 originates in southeast England and has been identified in Denmark, the Netherlands and in Australia, World Health Organization Covid-19 technical lead Maria Van Kerkhove said on Sunday.
"We understand that this variant has been identified also in Denmark, in the Netherlands and there was one case in Australia and it didn't spread further there," she said in an interview with the BBC.
Van Kerkhove said the new variant had been circulating in southeast England "since September," adding: "We understand that the virus does not cause more severe disease from the preliminary information that [the UK] shared with us, although again those studies are underway to look at hospitalized patients with this variant."
Londoners flee capital following new restrictions
When asked about the time-frame of the Tier 4 restrictions, which effectively put parts of the UK back into the lockdown seen in Spring, Hancock said Sunday: "Given how much faster this new variant spreads, it's going to be very difficult to keep it under control until we have the vaccine rolled out."
Hancock added what really mattered "is that people not only follow [the new Tier 4 measures], but everybody in a Tier 4 area act as if you have the virus to stop spreading it to other people. (...) We just know that this new variant, you can catch it more easily from a smaller amount of the virus being present."
Europe's coronavirus crisis is resurging. For months, 3 Nordic nations kept it under control — without lockdowns

Europe's coronavirus crisis is resurging. For months, 3 Nordic nations kept it under control — without lockdowns

"All of the different measures we have in place, we need more of them to control the spread of the new variant than we did to control the spread of the old variant," he added, in response to whether current measures to protect people, such as the use of masks and the 2-meter rule (6.5 feet), was enough to protect people from the new strain.
Still, Londoners piled on to trains and motorways on Saturday night as they rushed to leave the capital ahead of new restrictions announced by UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Passengers queue at Gatwick Airport in West Sussex.


Passengers queue at Gatwick Airport in West Sussex.
By 7 p.m. on Saturday evening, there were no free seats on trains leaving London from several stations in the capital, PA Media reported. Passengers complained about not being able to socially distance themselves within the train carriages.
The scenes were condemned by politicians and public health experts. London Mayor Sadiq Khan called the introduction of the restrictions "devastating" in an interview with the BBC, adding that scenes at London train stations "was a direct consequence of the chaotic way the announcement was made, and the late stage it was made."
"I understand why people want to return to see their mums, dads, elderly relations, but I think it's wrong," he said.
Keir Starmer, leader of the opposition Labour Party, accused Johnson of "gross negligence" in failing to act earlier. Starmer said Labour supported the latest coronavirus restrictions, but criticized the PM for waiting until the "11th hour" to take a decision.
"It was blatantly obvious last week that the Prime Minister's plan for a free-for-all over Christmas was a risk too far," Starmer told an online press conference. "And yet, rather than listening to concerns and taking them seriously, the Prime Minister did what he always does: dismissed the challenge, ruffled his hair and made a flippant comment.
"We have known about rising infections and the NHS reaching capacity in many parts of the country for weeks. The alarms bells have been ringing for weeks, but the Prime Minister chose to ignore them," he said.
"It is an act of gross negligence by a Prime Minister who, once again, has been caught behind the curve," he said.
Arnaud Siad, James Frater, Ivana Kottasova and Nicola Ruotolo contributed reporting.

 

Ragnarok

On and On, South of Heaven
I'm beginning to think that Boris Johnson is one of "them". :shk:
A wolf in conservative clothing.
Lock downs are proven to make things worse. Is that what he wants???

That should have become evident months ago.

He's talked a lot but nothing has changed on migrants from the middle east going to the UK, Brexit, Lockdowns...

Just another politician in the same mold of all the rest.
 

Ragnarok

On and On, South of Heaven
I can't even understand the panic. Nearly every article says that while this mutation is evidently more easily transmissible, there's nothing at all proving yet that it's more dangerous or more deadly.

Again, there have been over 3500 mutations since this started. Hover over the little circles on the genome and the mutation will be listed:


Any vaccine will be all but useless.

Thank a commie.
 

somewherepress

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
Now to be fair that isn't the "whole" point: there's also the the establishment of universal incomes, mandating bans on any assemblages that folks might use to resist the take overs of their govs, livelihoods, and lives, a swelling of the ranks of the Braunhemd, among many other features... :dvl2:


thus---

close the churches
and
Cancel Christmas
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I can't stress how important this next story is! I almost gave it its own thread and I will (or someone else probably will) if this gets more serious. Whereas Ireland has simply banned ALL passenger travel, flights, trains, etc for 48 houses it is letting those essential truckers haul freight between here and the UK.

FRANCE HAS NOT CUT THE UK OFF COMPLETELY! Yes, I'm sorry to shout but the Brits are holding an emergency COBRA (Highest level) meeting because if this goes on longer than 48 hours then all heck is likely to break loose!

France will allow no ferries, not even long-haul trucks to come in from the UK (meaning they can't leave France either) and lines are already more than 5 miles long on either side of the channel.

No planes, no trains, no ferries, no goods, no nothing...

Remember France is the MAJOR objector to the EU/UK proposed trade agreement because their fishing is the most affected (they want to fish in UK waters, England says nope - it is more complicated but you get the idea).

Since the UK already threatened warships to protect their fishing fleet if no deal was reached, this could get ugly really fast.

Again, if it is only for 48 hours, well all will survive but if this is open ended, watch out...- Melodi




BREAKING
COVID-19: PM to hold COBRA meeting as Europe closes borders to UK travel
The new strain is thought to be up to 70% more infectious than the original variant.
Sunday 20 December 2020 22:05, UK
Port of Dover

Image:France's travel restrictions led to the Port of Dover closing to 'accompanied' traffic (file pic)
Why you can trust Sky News
France has joined Ireland and a growing list of European countries to impose travel restrictions on the UK - forcing the prime minister to call an emergency COBRA meeting.
A Number 10 spokesperson said: "The Prime Minister will chair a COBRA meeting tomorrow to discuss the situation regarding international travel, in particular the steady flow of freight into and out of the UK."
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It comes after France suspended "all flows of people from the United Kingdom for 48 hours, and for all means of transport".
A government spokesman said the ban also includes all incoming accompanied freight by road, air, sea or rail.

The Port of Dover has since closed to "all accompanied traffic leaving the UK until further notice due to border restrictions in France".

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And Eurostar tweeted: "Following the announcement by the French government that the border with the UK will close at midnight tonight, we will only be able to run trains from Paris to London for the 21st-22nd December."

Transport secretary Grant Schapps tweeted: "We're asking the public & particularly hauliers not to travel to Kent ports or other routes to France.
 

et2

TB Fanatic
Nightwolf is researching this "new" strain, he said the way that the UK Government is reacting is more what would medically be expected for a sudden outbreak of Small Pox or Ebola; so either they are just idiots (I don't doubt that is possible) or there is something else also going on here.

He's going to research the medical side and I'll be looking for hints on the political/BREXIT/trade breakdown side.

Nightwolf did saw that real medical protocols if there WERE an outbreak of something as serious as Ebola, Small Pox or a new fast-killer disease would be to NOT give people a few hours to get out of Dodge.

In those cases, the rule is to lock down EVERYTHING and FOR REAL, RIGHT NOW! He said if that were the case, the Prime Minister should have said, as gently and as firm as possible - you MUST get HOME NOW!!

Probably with the military already ready to shut off every major route out of the area, all the trains stop as they get to the station, etc.

That still creates some chaos for many people - they might have to run special buses to get the elderly home and NHS workers to the hospitals but most people go home and they stay there - no several hours to leave.

Otherwise what will happen is exactly what did happen last night, people will spend hours in crowded stations, trains, buses, boats, highways, etc all fleeing the city (just like they did in 1666) and take whatever the current plague is with them.

Northern Ireland is having an emergency meeting in about 4 hours (late at night at 9pm) to decide what they are going to do next.

I will update on the new strain as I get information from Nightwolf.

Thank you and your husband for your work
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Timing is everything. With Trump gone ... there will be a Biden shutdown. The reset don’t ya know.
Actually, that is another interesting angle to all this - Biden has said that when (I'd say if) he's President there will be no trade deal with the UK, zip-nada-nothing if the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland is not totally upheld.

Aka there is NO hard border, no customs checks, no roads blocked, etc.

This also has had the UK Government in a panic because they had planned all along for the US to be their fallback, even if being forced to take in chlorine cleaned chicken and GMO foods (unlabeled and hidden) brought the UK public to the edges of revolt (BoJo just figured he could handle it).

But if there is no USA to fall back on and there is no trade-agreement at all with the EU, the UK (or the UK outside of Northern Ireland) is in a world of hurt.

I said that last one because when push comes to shove, the Republic of Ireland will help the North (everyone born in Ireland can have an Irish passport, that's how Gerry Adams was able to move down here and play politician for a few years).

The Republic is already sending extra ambulances and medical help to Nothern Ireland which has a much worse epidemic than we do down here.

The same thing would happen with basic food, medicine, and livestock supplies if the UK got cut off; but Ireland is NOT going to help out England - too much bad blood there (or at least they are not likely to help them out of a mess of their own making, they would help in a natural disaster or something).
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Part of a much longer UK Daily Mail article (lots of pictures) but it has more on the current situation this evening...


Pariah Britain: France, Germany, Ireland, Italy and The Netherlands are among nearly a dozen countries banning ALL flights from UK as Eurotunnel closes and French block British lorries after discovery of '70% more infectious' mutant Covid strain

  • France, Germany, Israel, El Salvador, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Italy, Belgium, Austria and Ireland have banned all flights from Britain
  • Boris Johnson will chair a meeting of the Government’s Cobra civil contingencies committee on Monday after a series of countries announced they were stopping flights from the UK, Downing Street has said
  • Eurotunnel Le Shuttle has said that the UK-France border will close at 11pm tonight and last train at 9.24pm
  • Southern England was plunged into a Tier 4 lockdown in a bid to suppress a 'mutant' strain of coronavirus
  • US authorities are looking 'very carefully' into the Covid-19 variant while indicating that a ban on UK travel was not currently on the cards
By RACHAEL BUNYAN and JACK WRIGHT and EMILY WEBBER FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 08:14, 20 December 2020 | UPDATED: 22:04, 20 December 2020


Britain's supermarket shelves may be emptied after France bans British lorries coming into the country for 48 hours following the discovery of the '70 per cent more infectious' mutant coronavirus strain.


Prime Minister Boris Johnson will chair a meeting of the Government’s Cobra civil contingencies committee on Monday after a series of countries announced they were stopping flights from the UK, Downing Street has said.
France has joined Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Bulgaria, Germany, Israel and El Salvador in banning all flights carrying passengers from the UK.

One road haulage boss told the BBC that while lorries are still allowed from France to the UK, he feared that many European drivers would be unwilling to make the trip fearing they could not get home for Christmas – meaning British supermarket shelves could empty.

He told the broadcaster: ‘Just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse – disaster upon disaster. I fear for supermarket supply chains.
Many will be reluctant to make the crossing to UK if they can’t get back given there is already congestion.'

The Eurotunnel Le Shuttle has said that the UK-France border will close at 11pm tonight and the last shuttle between the UK and France is at 9.24pm with access to the UK prohibited from 10pm.

It comes as the Eurostar has also cancelled its trains between London, Brussels in Belgium and Amsterdam in the Netherlands, starting from Monday.

US authorities are looking 'very carefully' into the virus variant spreading in the United Kingdom, top health officials said Sunday, while indicating that a ban on UK travel was not currently in the cards.

Moncef Slaoui, chief advisor to the government's Operation Warp Speed vaccine program, told CNN's 'State of the Union' that US officials 'don't know yet' if the variant is present in the country.

'We are, of course... looking very carefully into this,' including at the National Institutes of Health and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,' he said.
Britain's supermarket shelves may be emptied after France bans British lorries coming into the country for 48 hours following the new Covid-19 super strain. Pictured: Lorries queue to enter the port of Dover in Kent


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Britain's supermarket shelves may be emptied after France bans British lorries coming into the country for 48 hours following the new Covid-19 super strain. Pictured: Lorries queue to enter the port of Dover in Kent
A passenger walks through Fiumicino airport, near Rome, Italy, after the Italian government announced all flights to and from the UK will be suspended over fears of a new strain of the coronavirus


+29
A passenger walks through Fiumicino airport, near Rome, Italy, after the Italian government announced all flights to and from the UK will be suspended over fears of a new strain of the coronavirus
Passengers wait at Brussels Airport in Zaventem. Belgium said it was suspending flight and train arrivals from Britain from midnight for 24 hours


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Passengers wait at Brussels Airport in Zaventem. Belgium said it was suspending flight and train arrivals from Britain from midnight for 24 hours
37078352-9072287-image-a-28_1608497463564.jpg


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At the moment, he said, no strain of the virus appears to be resistant to the vaccines available.

'This particular variant in the UK, I think, is very unlikely to have escaped the vaccine immunity,' Slaoui said.
Eurostar stated on its website: 'Due to announcements from the French and Belgian governments that borders with the UK will close at midnight on Sunday 20th December, we are unable to run any trains from London to Paris, Brussels, Lille or Amsterdam on either Monday 21st December or Tuesday 22nd December.

'We are also unable to run trains from Amsterdam, Brussels and Lille to London on these dates. We can confirm that our trains will continue to operate from Paris to London.

'The plan is to resume all our train services to and from the UK on Wednesday 23rd December.'
 

et2

TB Fanatic
Covid-19: Dover port halts traffic to France for 48 hours


Covid-19: Dover port halts traffic to France for 48 hours
14 minutes ago
Dover
Getty Images
The port of Dover has been closed to all vehicle traffic leaving the UK for the next 48 hours.
France acted to halt lorry movements in the wake of fresh concerns over the spread of a new strain of coronavirus.
UK ministers and officials will discuss the move at the government's Cobra emergency committee on Monday.
Freight from coming to Britain from France will be allowed, but there are fears lorry drivers will not travel to avoid being stuck in the UK.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps urged the public and hauliers not to travel to ports in Kent, including Dover. "We expect significant disruption in the area," he said.
The Port of Dover is closed to traffic leaving the UK "until further notice" due to border restrictions in France, port authorities said in a statement.
"Both accompanied freight and passenger customers are asked not to travel to the port," it said. "We understand that the restrictions will be in place for 48 hours from midnight."
About 10,000 lorries a day travel between Dover and Calais during peak periods such as Christmas.
Border restrictions could mean disruption to food supplies, as well as difficulties in meeting orders of British goods in continental Europe.
"Tonight's suspension of accompanied freight traffic from the UK to France has the potential to cause serious disruption to UK Christmas fresh food supplies - and exports of UK food and drink," Food and Drink Federation (FDF) chief executive Ian Wright warned.
"Continental truckers will not want to travel here if they have a real fear of getting marooned.
"The government must very urgently persuade the French government to exempt accompanied freight from its ban."


Stockpiles ready


Freight industry lobby group Logistics UK said it was concerned about the welfare of drivers going from the UK to France, and said they should have access to regular testing.
It appealed for calm from shoppers, and said it was "maintaining close contact with UK government to ensure that supplies of fresh produce are available throughout Christmas and the new year."
Freight lorries are seen queueing as they wait to enter the port of Dover yesterday
Getty Images
Freight lorries are seen queueing as they wait to enter the port of Dover earlier this month
The British Retail Consortium (BRC) joined the FDF in appealing to the government to find a solution, but also added that there should be no immediate shortages.
"Retailers have stocked up on goods ahead of Christmas which should prevent immediate problems," the BRC said.
While the situation will be discussed at the government's Cobra emergency committee on Monday, meetings are being had between ministers and officials on Sunday night, according to BBC political correspondent Nick Eardley.
He added that the government does not think the restrictions will affect the delivery of Covid-19 vaccines to the UK.
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has called on the government to extend the Brexit transition period as it deals with the new coronavirus variant, saying it was a "profoundly serious situation" which "demands our 100% attention".
The current transition period is due to expire at the end of the year and the EU and UK are still negotiating a trade deal.
Without it both sides will have to collect expensive tariffs that the Office for Budget Responsibility says could harm the UK's economy.


Flight bans


French transport minister Jean-Baptiste Djebbari said France was suspending all traffic from the UK from midnight for at least 48 hours.
A number of countries have banned or are considering stopping flights from the UK following the emergence of a new variant of coronavirus.
Ireland, Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands and Belgium are all halting flights, and other nations are considering the move.
Trains to Belgium are also not operating.
Eurotunnel is suspending access to its Folkestone terminal from 22:00 GMT for traffic and freight heading to Calais.
Coronavirus cases in the UK have risen by 35,928 - nearly double the number recorded last Sunday, figures show.
Public Health England medical director Yvonne Doyle said the "sharp" rise in cases was of "serious concern".
It comes as Health Secretary Matt Hancock warned that the new variant of the virus was "getting out of control".
 

et2

TB Fanatic
Covid: Cases rise as Christmas rules come into force

Covid: Cases rise as Christmas rules come into force
2 hours ago
Empty Oxford Street
PA Media
Oxford Street, in central London, was virtually deserted on Sunday
Coronavirus cases in the UK have risen by 35,928 - nearly double the number recorded last Sunday, figures show.
Public Health England medical director Yvonne Doyle said the "sharp" rise in cases was of "serious concern".
It comes as Health Secretary Matt Hancock warned that a new variant of the virus was "getting out of control".
Christmas plans have been scrapped or restricted for millions across the UK amid warnings the variant is up to 70% more transmissible than previous types.
The number of new UK infections on Sunday is an all-time high for recorded cases and nearly double the 18,447 cases reported a week ago.
However, it is thought the infection rate was higher during the first peak in the spring, with testing capacity too limited at the time to detect the true number of daily cases.
Prof Doyle said most of the new cases in England were concentrated in London and the South East, although it was too early to say if this was linked to the new variant.


'Awful year'


The government's New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (Nervtag) estimates the variant could increase the R number by between 0.4 and 0.9, minutes released on Sunday show.
The R number is how many other people one person will infect on average; an epidemic is growing if it rises above 1.
A growing number of countries have banned travel from the UK as a result of this variant, including Ireland, France, Belgium, Italy and the Netherlands.
Eurotunnel is suspending access to its Folkestone terminal from 22:00 GMT for traffic and freight heading to Calais due to the 48-hour travel ban introduced by France.
Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr programme, Mr Hancock said the news about the new variant "has been an incredibly difficult end to frankly an awful year".
He said: "Of course we don't want to cancel Christmas... we don't want to take any of these measures, but it's our duty to take them when the evidence is clear."
Susan Hopkins, from Public Health England, told Andrew Marr there was evidence that people with the new strain had "higher viral loads", which meant they were more infectious.
Some 21 million people in England and Wales who entered new restrictions at midnight are being told to stay at home, while non-essential shops and businesses have to close.
Those living under the newly-created tier four restrictions in England will now be unable to mix with other households indoors at Christmas, unless they are part of their existing support bubble.
The health secretary said it was not clear how long the tier four measures would be in place, but it could be for months, "until we can get the vaccine going".
He added that people in tier four should act as if they may have the virus.
Starmer: Boris Johnson "has once again been caught behind the curve"
In the rest of England, Scotland and Wales, relaxed indoor mixing rules will only apply on Christmas Day.
Covid rules had been relaxed across the UK to allow up to three households to mix indoors for five days over the Christmas period.
A ban on travel between Scotland and the rest of the UK will also apply over the festive period. Police Scotland said it would be doubling its patrols on the borders but it would not be introducing check points.
Mainland Scotland is being placed under the tightest restrictions from Boxing Day.
Wales has also entered a new shutdown, with the health minister saying the new variant was "seeded" in every part of the country.
In Northern Ireland, where the planned relaxation of rules for Christmas is going ahead unchanged, four of the five main parties have called for an urgent meeting to discuss the restrictions.
Northern Ireland is already due to enter a six-week lockdown on Boxing Day.


Readers' stories


Rachel Adams
Nurse Rachel Adams said she was potentially missing the last Christmas with her parents
People whose Christmas plans were affected as a result of the changes have told the BBC of their anguish at being unable to see loved ones.
Nurse Rachel Adams had been planning to see her parents, who are in their 70s. Her father has prostate cancer.
She lives with her husband and two daughters, aged 18 and 21, in Thame, Oxfordshire, which is in tier two, and her parents live five hours away in Northumberland, which is in tier three.
"I am absolutely heartbroken," she said.
"I am missing potentially the last Christmas with my parents."
Gaynor Cawood
Gaynor Cawood said she couldn't believe the short notice given to cancel plans
Grandmother Gaynor Cawood, who lives near Loughborough in Leicestershire, was expecting to see her son, daughter-in-law and two grandchildren for Christmas.
But she lives in tier three and they live in London, which is now in tier four - meaning a ban on travel to other tiers.
"I can't believe the short notice the government have given us to cancel plans," she says.
"Not only am I now unable to get our Christmas presents to my son, daughter-in-law and two grandchildren - how do you explain to a five-year-old that all the exciting plans we made will now not happen?"
But not everyone will be obeying the restrictions over Christmas.
Alex, a teacher from Huddersfield, which is in tier three, said: "I will be continuing with my plans and meeting family on three days over Christmas."
He said he had recently recovered from Covid-19 and his family are being careful by taking tests and self-isolating.
"As a teacher I'm expected to work till the last day, mixing with 70 random households in an early years bubble, most of which I know do not follow the rules outside of school, or face legal action from [Education Secretary] Gavin Williamson.
"Therefore for three days, when I'm probably safest, as I know we are all OK, I'll continue as normal."
The PM's announcement on Saturday of new restrictions came just days after he defended plans to relax restrictions for five days during the festive period - despite calls by some in the medical profession to scrap the change.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said his party supported the latest restrictions, but he accused Boris Johnson of "gross negligence" in failing to act earlier.
Sir Keir told an online press conference that it was "blatantly obvious last week" that Mr Johnson's plans to relax the rules over Christmas was "a risk too far", adding that his claim that "this is all down to a new form of the virus that has just emerged does not stand up to scrutiny".
London Mayor Sadiq Khan told BBC Breakfast the "11th-hour announcement is a bitter blow" for families and businesses, saying it is the "chop-change, stop-start, that's led to so much anguish, despair, sadness and disappointment".
Similar to England's second national lockdown - tier four applies to Kent, Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Surrey (excluding Waverley), Gosport, Havant, Portsmouth, Rother and Hastings.
It also applies in London (all 32 boroughs and the City of London) and the east of England (Bedford, Central Bedford, Milton Keynes, Luton, Peterborough, Hertfordshire and Essex (excluding Colchester, Uttlesford and Tendring).
  • Residents told to stay at home, with exemptions for those who have to travel for work or education
  • Household mixing indoors is not allowed, unless you live with them, or they are part of your existing support bubble
  • All non-essential retail to close, including hairdressers, nail bars, indoor gyms and leisure facilities
  • Social mixing cut to meeting one person in an open public space
  • Communal religious worship is still allowed
The measures will be reviewed on 30 December.

 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Yep. Biden will let the UK starve/rot. I have had this in mind all along.

Prolly another reason certain foreign entities may have interfered with our re-election of President Trump..
 

jward

passin' thru




Amir Tsarfati
@BeholdIsrael

1h

Prime Minister Netanyahu said that the new virus strain is far more contagious but isn’t deadlier and the vaccine is able to stop this strain as well. He added that all people arriving in Israel from UK, Denmark and South Africa must be taken to quaran tine AWAY from their home.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat

Amir Tsarfati
@BeholdIsrael

1h

Prime Minister Netanyahu said that the new virus strain is far more contagious but isn’t deadlier and the vaccine is able to stop this strain as well. He added that all people arriving in Israel from UK, Denmark and South Africa must be taken to quaran tine AWAY from their home.
The Prime Minister doesn't know that for certain and neither does anyone else; at least the UK press has switched to "they are working on it at Porter Down" which is the UK level 4 bioweapons and serious disease research lab.

The HOPE the vaccine will work against this strain, Nightwolf said given the extremely limited public information (even for doctors) it probably should, but NO ONE KNOWS yet, and if they say they do they are lying (or have been misinformed).
 

jward

passin' thru
London_1280p_0.jpg


People at Saint Pancras station in London, waiting to board the last train to Paris today amid concerns that borders with France will close. Belgium said earlier today that it would ban trains from London for at least 24 hours.
Stefan Rousseau/PA via AP Images

Mutant coronavirus in the United Kingdom sets off alarms but its importance remains unclear
By Kai KupferschmidtDec. 20, 2020 , 5:45 PM

Science’s COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation.
On 8 December, during a regular Tuesday meeting about the spread of the pandemic coronavirus in the United Kingdom, scientists and public health experts saw a diagram that made them sit up straight. Kent, in the southeast of England, was experiencing a surge in cases, and a phylogenetic tree showing viral sequences from the county looked very strange, says Nick Loman, a microbial genomicist at the University of Birmingham. Not only were half the cases caused by one specific variant of SARS-CoV-2, but that variant was sitting on a branch of the tree that literally stuck out from the rest of the data. “I've not seen a part of the tree that looks like this before,” Loman says.
Less than two weeks later, that variant is causing mayhem in the United Kingdom and elsewhere in Europe. Yesterday, U.K. prime minister Boris Johnson announced stricter lockdown measures, saying the strain, which goes by the name B.1.1.7, appears to be better at spreading between people. The news led many Londoners to leave the city today, before the new rules take effect, causing overcrowded railway stations. Also today, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Italy announced they were temporarily halting passenger flights from the United Kingdom. The Eurostar train between Brussels and the British capital will stop running at midnight tonight for at least 24 hours.
Scientists, meanwhile, are hard at work trying to figure out whether B.1.1.7 is really more adept at human-to-human transmission—not everyone is convinced yet—and if so, why. They’re also wondering how it evolved so fast. B.1.1.7 has acquired 17 mutations all at once, a feat never seen before. “There's now a frantic push to try and characterize some of these mutations in the lab,” says Andrew Rambaut, a molecular evolutionary biologist at the University of Edinburgh.

Too many unknowns
Researchers have watched SARS-CoV-2 evolve in real time more closely than any other virus in history. So far, it has accumulated mutations at a rate of about 1 to 2 changes per month. That means many of the genomes sequenced today differ at around 20 points from the earliest genomes sequenced in China in January, but many variants with fewer changes are also circulating. “Because we have very dense surveillance of genomes, you can almost see every step,” Loman says.
But scientists have never seen the virus acquire more than a dozen mutations seemingly at once. They think it happened during a long infection of a single patient that allowed SARS-CoV-2 to go through an extended period of fast evolution, with multiple variants competing for advantage.
One reason to be concerned, Rambaut says, is that among the 17 are eight mutations in the gene that encodes the spike protein on the viral surface, two of which are particularly worrisome. One, called N501Y, has previously been shown to increase how tightly the protein binds to the ACE2 receptor, its entry point into human cells. The other, named 69-70del, leads to the loss of two amino acids in the spike protein and has been found in viruses that eluded the immune response in some immunocompromised patients.

There's now a frantic push to try and characterize some of these mutations in the lab.
Andrew Rambaut, University of Edinburgh

A fortunate coincidence helped show that B.1.1.7 (also called VUI-202012/01, for the first “variant under investigation” in December 2020), appears to be spreading faster than other variants in the United Kingdom. One of the PCR tests used widely in the country, called TaqPath, normally detects pieces of three genes. But viruses with 69-70del lead to a negative signal for the gene encoding the spike gene; instead only two genes show up. That means PCR tests, which the U.K. conducts by the hundreds of thousands daily and which are far quicker and cheaper than sequencing the entire virus, can help keep track of B.1.1.7.
In a press conference on Saturday, chief science advisor Patrick Vallance said that B.1.1.7, which first appeared in a virus isolated on 20 September, accounted for about 26% of cases in mid-November. “By the week commencing the 9th of December, these figures were much higher,” he said. “So, in London, over 60% of all the cases were the new variant.” Boris Johnson added that the slew of mutations may have increased the virus’s transmissibility by 70%.
Christian Drosten, a virologist at Charité University Hospital in Berlin, says that was premature. “There are too many unknowns to say something like that,” he says. For one thing, the rapid spread of B.1.1.7 might be down to chance. Scientists previously worried that a variant that spread rapidly from Spain to the rest of Europe—confusingly called B.1.177—might be more transmissible, but today they think it is not; it just happened to be carried all over Europe by travelers who spent their holidays in Spain. Something similar might be happening with B.1.1.7, says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Georgetown University. Drosten notes that the new mutant also carries a deletion in another viral gene, ORF8, that previous studies suggest might reduce the virus’s ability to spread.
But further reason for concern comes from South Africa, where scientists have sequenced genomes in three provinces where cases are soaring: Eastern Cape, Western Cape, and KwaZulu Natal. They identified a lineage separate from the U.K. variant that also has the N501Y mutation in the spike gene. “We found that this lineage seems to be spreading much faster,” says Tulio De Oliveira, a virologist at the University of KwaZulu Natal whose work first alerted U.K. scientists to the importance of N501Y. (A preprint of their results on the strain, which they are calling 501Y.V2, will be released on Monday, De Oliveira says.)

Another worry is that B.1.1.7 could cause more severe disease. There is anecdotal evidence that the South African variant may be doing that in young people and those who are otherwise healthy, says John Nkengasong, director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. “It’s concerning, but we really need more data to be sure.” The African Task Force for Coronavirus will convene an emergency meeting to discuss the issue on Monday, Nkengasong says.
Still, B.1.177, the strain from Spain, offers a cautionary lesson, says virologist Emma Hodcroft of the University of Basel. U.K. scientists initially thought it had a 50% higher mortality rate, but that turned out to be “purely messy, biased data in the early days,” she says. “I think that is a very strong reminder that we always have to be really careful with early data.” In the case of N501Y, more young people may be getting sick because many more are getting infected; Oliveira says some recent post-exam celebrations in South Africa have turned into superspreading events. Studies in cell culture and animal experiments will have to show how a virus with several or all of the mutations carried by the new variant compares with previous variants, says Drosten.

Getting definitive answers could take months. But Ravindra Gupta, a virologist at the University of Cambridge has made a start. The 69-70del mutation appeared together with another mutation named D796H in the virus of a patient who was infected for several months and was given convalescent plasma to treat the disease. (The patient eventually died.) In the lab, Gupta’s group found that virus carrying the two mutations was less susceptible to convalescent plasma from several donors than the wildtype virus. That suggests it can evade antibodies targeting the wildtype virus, Gupta wrote in a preprint published this month. He also engineered a lentivirus to express mutated versions of the spike protein and found that the deletion alone made that virus twice as infectious. He is now conducting similar experiments with viruses that carry both the deletion and the N501Y mutation. The first results should appear just after Christmas, Gupta says.

Does it occur elsewhere?
The ban on flights from the United Kingdom that other countries are imposing “is pretty extreme,” says Hodcroft. But it does give countries time to think about putting any additional measures in place to deal with passengers from the United Kingdom, she says: “I would hope that most countries in Europe are thinking about this.”
But scientists say B.1.1.7 may already be much more widespread. Dutch researchers have found it in a sample from one patient taken in early December, Dutch health minister Hugo de Jonge wrote in a letter to Parliament today. They will try to find out how the patient became infected and if there are related cases. Other countries may well have the variant as well, says epidemiologist William Hanage of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; the United Kingdom may just have picked it up first because that country has the most sophisticated SARS-CoV-2 genomic monitoring in the world. Many countries have little or no sequencing.

The evolutionary process that led to B.1.1.7 may also occur elsewhere. With vaccines being rolled out, the selective pressure on the virus is going to change, meaning variants that help the virus thrive could be selected for, says Kristian Andersen, an infectious disease researcher at Scripps Research. The important thing in the coming months will be picking up such events, says Andersen. “Whatever enabled the B.1.1.7 lineage to emerge is likely going on in other parts of the world”, he says. "Will we be able to actually detect it and then follow up on it? That, to me is one of the critical things.”



Kai Kupferschmidt
Kai is a contributing correspondent for Science magazine based in Berlin, Germany. He is the author of a book about the color blue, published in 2019.

 

jward

passin' thru
I can't even understand the panic. Nearly every article says that while this mutation is evidently more easily transmissible, there's nothing at all proving yet that it's more dangerous or more deadly.

There may be a legitimate issue with the # of beds available to treat it/other issues though- which originally was the biggest most real concern wbw the disease first rolled out last year...
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
The mutant ‘British’ Covid-19 strain that prompted a number of European nations to shut down travel to and from the UK, and is thought to be highly contagious, has also been discovered in Italy, after it imposed its travel ban.

The very same new coronavirus strain behind the current scare in Europe has been isolated in a laboratory at Celio Military Hospital in Rome. It was obtained from a person that had previously tested positive for Covid-19, the nation’s health ministry confirmed.
“The Celio Scientific Department … sequenced a genome of a virus … [similar] to the variant found in the UK over recent weeks,” the ministry stated on Sunday.

The patient infected with the new virus strain and his partner had recently returned from the UK and landed in Rome’s Fiumicino airport, according to Italian authorities.

Both of them have been placed in isolation while their family members and “close contacts” were said to be following “procedures established by the ministry.”

Earlier on Sunday, Italy had joined a host of other European nations that are temporarily suspending all travel to and from the UK, due to concerns about the new virus strain.


Even those who had travelled through British territory over the last 14 days have been barred from entering Italy, under an order signed by the Health Minister, Roberto Speranza.“This Covid variant, recently discovered in London, is worrying and will need to be investigated by our scientists,” the minister said, while providing no details about the timing of the ban.

Rome also declared a nationwide lockdown for the upcoming holidays, closing non-essential stores and restricting home visits.

Other EU nations, including Austria, Belgium, Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands, also said they would shut down all travel to and from the UK, while Turkey said it’s shutting down connections with both the UK and the Netherlands, as well as with Denmark and South Africa.

Previously, UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock admitted that the newly discovered, highly contagious strain is “out of control,” as he called for more restrictive measures to stem its spread. The British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, announced strict Tier-4 lockdowns in an area including London, the Southeast, and Peterborough in the east on Saturday, justifying the measures by the spread of this new Covid-19 variant.

 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
Looks like this new flavor of the 'ronas has escaped from the UK into the EU mainland.

 

et2

TB Fanatic
Sydney isolated from rest of Australia as COVID outbreak grows

Sydney isolated from rest of Australia as COVID outbreak grows
James Redmayne
SYDNEY (Reuters) -Sydney was isolated from the rest of Australia on Sunday after all of the country’s states and territories imposed travel restrictions on its residents as a coronavirus cluster in the city grew to around 70.

The Australian Capital Territory (ACT) sent a stern ‘do not come to us’ message to Sydney, the country’s most populous city of more than five million people, warning its residents they would be quarantined for 14 days if they arrived..

“If you are not an ACT resident and have been in greater Sydney...our message is simple: do not travel to the ACT,” the ACT health department said.

The states of Victoria and Queensland, and the Northern Territory, banned people arriving from Sydney as of Monday.

Queensland police will reintroduce road checkpoints at the New South Wales (NSW) state border to help enforce the new declaration of greater Sydney as a COVID-19 hotspot.

South Australia state imposed a 14-day quarantine for Sydney arrivals on Sunday and banned travellers from affected suburbs. The island state of Tasmania took similar steps on Saturday. Western Australia state imposed a hard border closure.

Travellers from elsewhere in NSW, where Sydney is the state capital, will require documents showing they are not coming from the affected Sydney suburbs if they wish to cross state borders.

About a quarter of a million people in Sydney’s northern beach suburbs where the outbreak has occurred have been put into a strict lockdown until Christmas Eve.

“If we can lockdown here and get rid of it, fantastic and everyone else can be free,” Rachel Buxcon, a retired northern beaches resident said. “But if it extends, then we’re all in it together.”

CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY CHAOS
On Sunday, NSW state Premier Gladys Berejiklian said public gathering across the rest of Sydney will be limited, with household gatherings capped at 10 participants and hospitality venues at 300, among other restrictions.



FILE PHOTO: A person is swabbed by a medical professional at a drive-through coronavirus disease (COVID-19) testing clinic in the Warriewood suburb of Sydney, Australia, December 18, 2020. REUTERS/Loren Elliott


“We must take this action now to ensure we keep on top of this outbreak,” said Berejiklian.

She also urged people in the greater Sydney area to wear masks in public, although it was not mandatory.

“If you’re going grocery shopping anywhere in NSW, please wear a mask, if you’re going to a place of worship in NSW, please wear a mask ... and for goodness sake, do not get on public transport unless you’re wearing a mask,” she said.

Until this week, Australia had gone more than two weeks without any local transmission and had lifted most restrictions ahead of Christmas. The Sydney outbreak and border restrictions have thrown Christmas holiday travel plans into chaos.

The annual Sydney-to-Hobart yacht race starting Boxing Day Dec. 26 has been cancelled for the first time in its 76 year history as crews and their families would have to quarantine on arrival in Tasmania.

Hotels and holiday rentals in NSW have been swamped with mass Christmas cancellations and restaurants have seen the number of patrons drop significantly, local media reported.

“An important reminder as we come into the Christmas holiday season is that the virus has not gone anywhere and we must remain careful,” Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison said in a video message.

Australia has avoided the worst of the pandemic due to border closures, lockdowns, widespread testing and social distancing. It has recorded around 28,100 infections, the overwhelming majority in Victoria state, and 908 deaths.

NSW health authorities said that there were more than 28,200 tests conducted in the past 24 hours and urged more people to get tested. The origin of the virus in Sydney remains unknown, which genome testing suggests is a U.S. strain.
 

et2

TB Fanatic
More European nations, Canada ban flights from Britain, fearing new strain of coronavirus

More European nations, Canada ban flights from Britain, fearing new strain of coronavirus
By KIRSTEN GRIESHABER and SYLVIA HUI
Associated Press |
Dec 20, 2020 at 6:58 PM
BERLIN — A growing list of European Union nations barred travel from the U.K. on Sunday and others were considering similar action, in a bid to block a new strain of coronavirus sweeping across southern England from spreading to the continent.
France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Ireland and Bulgaria all announced restrictions on U.K. travel, hours after British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that Christmas shopping and gatherings in southern England must be canceled because of rapidly spreading infections blamed on the new coronavirus variant.
Johnson immediately placed those regions under a strict new Tier 4 restriction level, upending Christmas plans for millions.
France banned all travel from the U.K. for 48 hours from midnight Sunday, including trucks carrying freight through the tunnel under the English Channel or from the port of Dover on England’s south coast. French officials said the pause would buy time to find a “common doctrine” on how to deal with the threat, but it threw the busy cross-channel route used by thousands of trucks a day into chaos.
The Port of Dover tweeted Sunday night that its ferry terminal was “closed to all accompanied traffic leaving the UK until further notice due to border restrictions in France.”
Eurostar passenger trains from London to Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam were also halted.
Germany said all flights coming from Britain, except cargo flights, were no longer allowed to land starting midnight Sunday. It didn’t immediately say how long the flight ban would last. Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said he was issuing a flight ban for 24 hours starting at midnight “out of precaution.” “There are a great many questions about this new mutation,” he said, adding he hoped to have more clarity by Tuesday.
A senior Canadian government official told The Associated Press on Sunday evening that Canada would also ban flights from Britain. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak publicly ahead of a formal announcement, said the ban would take effect Monday. Cargo flights will not be affected, the official said.
The British government said Johnson would preside at a meeting of the government’s crisis committee, COBRA, on Monday in the wake of the other nations’ measures. They come at a time of huge economic uncertainty for the U.K., less than two weeks before it leaves the EU’s economic structures Dec. 31, and with talks on a new post-Brexit trade relationship still deadlocked.
Johnson said Saturday that a fast-moving new variant of the virus that is 70% more transmissible than existing strains appeared to be driving the rapid spread of new infections in London and southern England in recent weeks. But he stressed “there’s no evidence to suggest it is more lethal or causes more severe illness,” or that vaccines will be less effective against it.
On Sunday, British Health Secretary Matt Hancock added to the alarm when he said “the new variant is out of control.” The U.K. recorded 35,928 further confirmed cases, around double the number from a week ago.
Germany, which holds the rotating EU presidency, called a special crisis meeting on Monday to coordinate the response to the virus news among the bloc’s 27 member states.
The Netherlands banned flights from the U.K. for at least the rest of the year. Ireland issued a 48-hour flight ban. Italy said it would block flights from the U.K. until Jan.6, and an order signed Sunday prohibits entry into Italy by anyone who has been in the U.K. in the last 14 days.
The Czech Republic imposed stricter quarantine measures from people arriving from Britain.
Beyond Europe, Israel also said it was banning flights from Britain, Denmark and South Africa because those were the countries where the mutation is found.
The World Health Organization tweeted late Saturday that it was “in close contact with U.K. officials on the new #COVID19 virus variant” and promised to update governments and the public as more is learned.
The new strain was identified in southeastern England in September and has been spreading in the area ever since, a WHO official told the BBC on Sunday.
“What we understand is that it does have increased transmissibility, in terms of its ability to spread,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19.
Studies are under way to better understand how fast it spreads and whether “it’s related to the variant itself, or a combination of factors with behavior,” she added.
She said the strain had also been identified in Denmark, the Netherlands and Australia, where there was one case that didn’t spread further.
“The longer this virus spreads, the more opportunities it has to change,” she said. “So we really need to do everything we can right now to prevent spread.”
Viruses mutate regularly, and scientists have found thousands of different mutations among samples of the virus causing COVID-19. Many of these changes have no effect on how easily the virus spreads or how severe symptoms are.
British health authorities said that while the variant has been circulating since September, it wasn’t until the last week that officials felt they had enough evidence to declare that it has higher transmissibility than other circulating coronaviruses.
Patrick Vallance, the British government’s chief scientific adviser, said officials are concerned about the new variant because it contained 23 different changes, “an unusually large number of variants” affecting how the virus binds to and enters cells in the body.
Officials aren’t certain whether it originated in the U.K., Vallance added. But by December, he said it was causing over 60% of infections in London.
U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee for U.S. surgeon general said Sunday that the emergence of the new strain doesn’t change the public health guidance on precautions for reducing the spread of the virus, such as wearing masks, social distancing and washing hands.
“While it seems to be more easily transmissible, we do not have evidence yet that this is a more deadly virus to an individual who acquires it,” Vivek Murthy said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “There’s no reason to believe that the vaccines that have been developed will not be effective against this virus, as well.”
Europe has been walloped this fall by soaring new infections and deaths due to a resurgence of the virus, and many nations have reimposed a series of restrictions to reign in their outbreaks.
Britain has seen over 67,000 deaths in the pandemic, the second-highest confirmed toll in Europe after Italy. Europe as a whole has recorded nearly 499,000 virus deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University that experts believe is an undercount, due to limited testing and missed cases.
The European Medicines Agency, meanwhile, is meeting Monday to approve the first COVID-19 vaccine for the European Union’s 27 nations, bringing vaccinations closer for millions of EU citizens. The vaccine made by German pharmaceutical company BioNTech and American drugmaker Pfizer is already in use in the United States, Britain, Canada and other countries.
The EMA moved up its assessment of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine by a week after heavy pressure from EU governments, especially Germany, which has said that after the EMA approval it could start vaccinating citizens as early as next Sunday.
In an urgent address to the nation on Saturday, Johnson ordered all non-essential shops, hairdressers and gyms in London and large parts of southern England closed and told Britons to reorganize their holiday plans. No mixing of households is allowed indoors in the region, and only essential travel is permitted. In the rest of England, people will be allowed to meet in Christmas bubbles for just one day instead of the five that were planned.
After he spoke, videos emerged online showing crowds of people at London’s train stations, apparently making a dash for places in the U.K. with less stringent coronavirus restrictions. Health Secretary Matt Hancock called those scenes “totally irresponsible.”
While Hancock insisted officials had acted “very quickly and decisively,” critics said Britain’s Conservative government should have moved against rising infections much earlier.
“The alarms bells have been ringing for weeks, but the prime minister chose to ignore them,” said Keir Starmer, leader of the opposition Labour Party. “It is an act of gross negligence by a prime minister who, once again, has been caught behind the curve.”
 

glennb6

Inactive
UK fights new Covid strain, PM Johnson orders tighter curbs
Corrected headline:

To implement tighter curbs in UK, PM Johnson orders new Covid strain.
 
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