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    Johnson announces tiered system in new COVID-19 curbs

    A television shows Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaking from 10 Downing Street in London, as customers sit at the bar inside the William Gladstone pub in Liverpool, north west England on October 12, 2020, following the announcement of new local lockdown measures to be imposed to help stem a second wave of the novel coronavirus COVID-19. (Photo by PAUL ELLIS/AFP via Getty Images)

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson imposed a tiered system of further restrictions on parts of England on Monday, including shutting pubs, to curb an acceleration in COVID-19 cases, though anger was rising at the cost of the curtailment of freedoms.

    Johnson announced a new three-tiered system in an attempt to standardise a patchwork of often complicated and confusing restrictions imposed across England. Lawmakers will vote on the move on Tuesday.

    The lockdowns will include shutting pubs and bars and banning wedding receptions in areas placed in the “very high” alert level from Wednesday. The other alert levels in the new system are “medium” and “high”.

    So far, Merseyside in northwest England – which includes the city of Liverpool – is the only area classified at the “very high” level. Gyms, leisure centres, casinos, betting shops and adult gaming centres there will also close, Johnson said.

    Whole swathes of northern England already facing local restrictions will automatically enter the “high” risk tier.

    “We must act to save lives,” Johnson told parliament, adding that he did not want another national lockdown and that he understood the frustrations of those chafing at the “repressions of liberty”.

    “If we let the virus rip, then the bleak mathematics dictate that we would suffer not only an intolerable death toll from COVID, but we would put such a huge strain on our NHS with an uncontrolled second spike that our doctors and nurses would simply be unable to devote themselves to other treatments.”

    Johnson said businesses forced to close would be supported under a new government programme to fund two-thirds of an employee’s monthly wages, as well as extra support for local contact tracing and enforcement.

    Health officials say the freshest data showed infections were rising across the north of England and in some more southerly areas too, while the virus was creeping up age bands towards the elderly from those aged 16-29 years.

    Chris Whitty, the government’s chief medical adviser, said the standard restrictions that would apply to very high risk areas would not be enough to control the outbreak there, and urged local authorities to go further.

    “The base will not be sufficient … but there are additional things that can be done within that guidance,” he said.

    Schools, restaurants and most workplaces will remain open even in the “very high” risk areas.

    Manchester intensive care consultant Jane Eddleston said 30 per cent of critical care beds were taken up with COVID-19 patients and this was starting to affect healthcare for others.

    “This is not how we want to live our lives but this is the narrow path we have to tread between the social and economic trauma of a full lockdown and massive human and indeed economic cost of an uncontained epidemic,” Johnson said.

    The three-tiered system applies only to England as devolved authorities in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have responsibility for their own health arrangements.

    Britain’s large hospitality sector says it is being brought to its knees by the restrictions.

    Karen Strickland, landlady of The Grapes pub in Liverpool, said their income was already down by 70 per cent with the current enforced countrywide closing time of 10 p.m., and the government’s support scheme help was not enough.

    “It’s absolutely horrendous,” she said.

    The Night Time Industries Association, an industry body, said Monday it was mounting a legal challenge against the restrictions, calling them “hugely disproportionate and unjust”.

    Main opposition Labour leader Keir Starmer meanwhile accused Johnson of “running to catch up with the virus that he has lost control over long ago”.

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