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Thursday 11 June 2020 08:18
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Boris Johnson has told ministers that he wishes to scrap the social distancing two-metre rule within weeks so that schools can fully reopen for the new academic year, amid growing Tory insistence in a bid to prevent further damage to the economy.
Chief scientific officer Sir Patrick Vallance suggested the two-metre measure was not a hard and fast “scientific rule”, as the prime minister announced the formation of “support bubbles” – allowing two households to unite for the first time in 11 weeks.
It came as Professor Neil Ferguson, a former Sage member whose advice helped shape the UK’s coronavirus response, told MPs that introducing lockdown rules one week earlier could have halved the country’s death toll, as England’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty admitted that failure to rapidly begin widespread testing was the top of “a long list” of his regrets about the handling of the pandemic.
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Chief inspector of schools Amanda Spielman told BBC Radio 4’s
Today programme: “I would like to hear a much more optimistic approach. I think it should be about what we can do, not about what we can’t do.”
She added: “Many schools are already showing that within the public health guidance that sets the expectation for these bubbles of 15 children there’s a great deal that can be done.
“It is also important to remember that within the bubbles social distancing is an aspiration, not an absolute expectation.”
“The risk to children themselves is very low indeed and those in education should take some confidence from that. It’s about starting from the position of seeing what can we create, how far we can go?”
Health services in the worst-hit cities of Mumbai, New Delhi and Chennai have become swamped by the rising infections, as India’s tally reaches 286,579 confirmed cases – the fifth highest in the world, with 8,102 deaths.
The spike comes as the government moved ahead with the reopening of restaurants, shopping malls and places of worship in most of India after lockdown of more than two months. Subways, hotels and schools remain closed.
The actual infection numbers are thought to be higher because of limited testing, capacity for which the health ministry says it is ramping up with more than 145,000 daily tests.
The government also said that the total number of recovered patients has exceeded the active cases for the first time with the recovery rate of nearly 49 per cent.
North Macedonia has recorded its highest number of coronavirus deaths in more than a month, as authorities warned that citizens were ignoring warnings to wear masks and to observe social distancing.
Some 125 new infections and seven deaths in the past 24 hours were recorded overnight, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the country of about 2.1 million people to 3,364, including 164 deaths.
Health authorities said that the new spike is related to mass gatherings three weeks ago, during the celebrations of religious holidays, particularly in the capital of Skopje and three other regions.
The government says new movement restrictions are unnecessary but it ordered police to be strict in enforcing remaining controls and to issue fines, when merited. Police fined a total 1,143 people in 24 hours who were found without protective masks on Wednesday.
Simon Clarke hit back at growing criticism that the lockdown came too late – leading to 50,000 people losing their lives – by arguing it was explained by the UK’s unique vulnerability.
“The truth is that Britain was always going to be hugely exposed to this virus because of some the features of our society,” the local government minister said.
“We are a global travel hub – we were always going to face big challenges.”
However, Mr Clarke rejected a suggestion that was further proof that strict quarantine rules should have been imposed in March, instead of only in mid-June.
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Boris Johnson refused to say whether he regretted not going into lockdown earlier in March during the Downing Street press conference, saying it was “premature” to make judgements while the pandemic was ongoing,Lizzy Buchan reports.
But Professor Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer, admitted that failure to rapidly begin widespread testing was the top of “a long list” of his regrets about the UK response. He said scientific advisers were “always looking back” in order to learn lessons as events unfolded.
Prof Ferguson, who resigned from the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) in May for breaching lockdown rules, made the extraordinary comments following questions from MPs over why the UK death toll was far higher than the original predictions.
He told the Commons Science and Technology Committee: “We knew the epidemic was doubling every three to four days before lockdown interventions were introduced.
“So had we introduced lockdown measures a week earlier, we would have reduced the final death toll by at least a half.
“So whilst I think the measures, given what we knew about this virus then in terms of its transmission and fatality, were warranted, certainly had we introduced them earlier we would have seen many fewer deaths.”
Mr Johnson has told ministers he wants to change the rule within weeks, possibly to bring the UK into line with World Health Organisation guidelines advising people keep a distance of one metre, according to
The Telegraph.
The news comes after the government’s chief scientific officer, Sir Patrick Vallance, suggested the two-metre social distancing measures were not a hard and fast “scientific rule”, Tom Barnes reports.
“It is wrong to portray this as a scientific rule that says it is two metres or nothing – that is not what the advice has been and it is not what the advice is now,” Sir Patrick said at the Downing Street briefing.
Mr Johnson says he wants all pupils back in classrooms by September, after abandoning plans to get more primary school children back in class before England’s summer break – admitting the government had been forced to move “slower than we would have liked in some areas”.
Meanwhile, the prime minister is also under increasing pressure from his own MPs to scrap the two-metre rule in order to prevent further damage to the economy. Mr Johnson “instinctively” wants to relax guidelines, but is concerned about a potential second wave of coronavirus, the Daily Mail reported.
Conservative MP Iain Duncan Smith told the Mail reducing the two-metre rule to one metre was the “single most important priority to unlock the economy.”
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