Gulf Times

UK PM optimistic coronaviru­s lockdown can be eased soon

UK ministers in push to boost vaccine uptake

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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said yesterday that he is optimistic that he could announce the easing of some lockdown measures soon as the government nears its target of offering vaccines to 15mn people in priority groups.

The government says it is on track to have offered an injection by tomorrow to everyone who is aged 70 and over, as well as those who are clinically vulnerable, frontline health and social care workers, and older adults in care homes.

With infections and hospitalis­ations beginning to fall, Johnson is under pressure from some in his own party to set out when strict lockdown restrictio­ns, which have caused the biggest crash in economic output in more than 300 years, will be eased.

“I’m optimistic, I won’t hide it from you, I’m optimistic, but we have to be cautious,” Johnson, who will outline a route map out of the lockdown on February 22, told broadcaste­rs.

He said reopening schools remain the priority, with the hope they could return on March 8.

“Then working forwards to getting non-essential retail open as well, and then in due course as and when we can prudently and cautiously of course, we want to be opening hospitalit­y as well,” he said.

Britain, which has recorded more than 120,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s (Covid-19), was the first Western country to begin mass vaccinatio­ns in December, and more than 14mn Britons have since received their first dose.

But Johnson said the number of new cases remained high, with more than 15,000 reported on Friday, as did the number of deaths, but “perhaps starting to come down quite fast”.

Some newspapers reported yesterday that nightspots and restaurant­s might be able to serve to customers outdoors from as early as April, and restrictio­ns on social mixing easing by May, but Johnson declined to be drawn on that timetable.

He also echoed Matt Hancock, the health minister, who earlier said that the country could live with the virus as it did with flu by the end of the year and make it a treatable disease.

“I do think that in due time, it will become something that we simply live with some people will be more vulnerable than others that’s inevitable,” Johnson said.

Hancock also announced that innovative treatments for Covid-19 would soon be fasttracke­d through the UK’s clinical trial system, to make them available in months rather than years.

Almost 30 government ministers will tour vaccinatio­n centres, from sports stadia to cathedrals, to spread the message of the importance of getting a shot amid concern that some groups, such as certain ethnic minorities, are not taking up the vaccine offer to the same extent as the rest of the population.

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