PM announces ‘tier 4’ Covid curbs and curtails Christmas mixing in England
Tier 4 #Tier4
© Getty Images LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – DECEMBER 2: Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a news conference on the ongoing situation with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Downing Street on December 2, 2020 in London, England. The UK Government announced the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid Vaccine has been approved for use in the UK with rollout expected as early as next week. High up on the priority list will be residents and staff of care homes, people over the age of 80 and people with underlying health problems. (Photo by John Sibley-WPA Pool/Getty Images)
Boris Johnson has issued a new “stay at home” order covering London and much of the south and east of England, and dramatically curtailed plans for Christmas mixing nationwide, in response to a new fast-spreading strain of coronavirus.
Just days after reaffirming the festive “bubble” plan and claiming it would be “inhuman” to cancel Christmas, the prime minister announced the creation of a new, stricter “tier 4”.
Only households living outside this area will now be allowed to mix for Christmas in England – and then only for a single day, 25 December, with long-distance travel discouraged.
The Scottish and Welsh governments have been briefed on the situation and are expected to announce their own plans.
The new tier 4 rules will come into effect at midnight, and will be similar to those in place during the four-week lockdown in November.
Non-essential retail, leisure venues and close-contact services such as hairdressers will not be allowed to reopen after they close on Saturday.
Members of the public will be ordered to stay at home, aside from a few exemptions such as taking exercise. The only mixing with other households allowed in tier 4 will be meeting up with a single other person, outdoors.
The area affected includes all of London and much of the south and east of England, including Kent, most of Essex, most of Surrey, as well Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Hertfordshire, parts of Bedfordshire, Gosport, Portsmouth and Peterborough.
The restrictions were announced by the prime minister at a hastily-convened press conference on Saturday, alongside the chief medical officer, Chris Whitty, and the chief scientific adviser, Patrick Vallance. They will initially be in place for a fortnight.
Johnson announced the draconian new restrictions after being presented with evidence on Friday night that the new strain of coronavirus recently identified in the capital and in Kent, is spreading more rapidly than the previous strain.
© Photograph: Alberto Pezzali/PA Boris Johnson was presented with new evidence by his scientific advisers late on Friday night.
Scientists do not yet have evidence that the new variant has a higher mortality rate, or that it affects the effectiveness of vaccines or treatments for Covid.
But the government’s scientific advisers have become increasingly alarmed about evidence and modelling suggesting it is spreading very rapidly. In particular, there were concerns that the prevalence of the virus had not been falling in Kent, despite the county being under tier 3 restrictions.
The weekly average case rate for England has increased by more than 66% in the past fortnight, and in London it has nearly doubled in the past week. The new variant is accounting for 60% of infections in London.
The plans were confirmed in a cabinet call on Saturday afternoon, and the prime minister also spoke to the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, to discuss them.
Just three days ago, Johnson taunted Starmer with wanting to “cancel Christmas”, as he insisted the government would be sticking with looser regulations allowing up to three families to mix for up to five days.
Instead of changing the rules, the prime minister had exhorted the public to be cautious, saying, “a smaller Christmas is going to be a safer Christmas, and shorter Christmas is a safer Christmas”.