UK, US take biggest leap in easing virus restrictions
Published: 09:05 PM,May 17,2021 | EDITED : 12:05 AM,May 18,2021
Customers take in the view from a pod on the re-opened London Eye tourist attraction in London as Covid-19 lockdown restrictions ease across the country. - AFP
LONDON: Britons streamed into restaurants, museums and other indoor venues on Monday as the country eased pandemic restrictions to fight a devastating Covid-19 wave.
As the United States and Britain move away from harsh restrictions thanks to rapid vaccinations, new strains have forced several countries in Asia to shut schools and impose travel bans, highlighting the persistent global threat posed by the pandemic.
With known global infections approaching 163 million and the rise of new variants complicating the fight, even the governments easing closures are warning citizens to remain careful.
'Together we have reached another milestone in our roadmap out of lockdown, but we must take this next step with a heavy dose of caution,' British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Sunday.
'We are keeping the spread of the variant first identified in India under close observation and taking swift action where infection rates are rising.'
Across England, Wales and most of Scotland, people on Monday could once again grab a drink, a bite and dine inside restaurants and cafes. Cinemas, museums and sports venues also opened their doors for the first time in months.
People were able to once again visit each other at home and to head to Portugal, where the British are normally the largest tourist contingent.
'It's nice to get away and be back here,' said Barry Thompson, a 63-year-old retired policeman from Manchester who landed in the southern town of Faro with his wife and son. 'We're very excited.'
In another sign of life returning to normal in Europe, Disneyland Paris announced it would reopen on June 17.
The persistent threat of the coronavirus is casting a shadow on the already delayed Tokyo Olympics, due to begin in less than 10 weeks even with parts of Japan under a state of emergency.
Organisers have insisted that they will go ahead despite the risk, but the opposition was brought into focus Monday when a new poll showed 80 per cent of Japanese were against hosting the Games this year.
Japan's vaccine rollout has been slow despite its wealth, but concerns are growing that poorer nations will be left even further behind because of vaccine inequality.
The WHO chief on Friday asked vaccine-wealthy nations to refrain from giving shots to children and adolescents and instead donate those doses to other nations.
'We are concerned that the deadly spike in India is a precursor to what will happen if those warnings remain unheeded,' Unicef executive director Henrietta Fore said Monday.
In France, pharmaceuticals giant Sanofi reported positive results for a Phase 2 trial of a Covid vaccine it is developing with Britain's GSK, which will enable a late-stage trial to start in the coming weeks. - AFP
As the United States and Britain move away from harsh restrictions thanks to rapid vaccinations, new strains have forced several countries in Asia to shut schools and impose travel bans, highlighting the persistent global threat posed by the pandemic.
With known global infections approaching 163 million and the rise of new variants complicating the fight, even the governments easing closures are warning citizens to remain careful.
'Together we have reached another milestone in our roadmap out of lockdown, but we must take this next step with a heavy dose of caution,' British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Sunday.
'We are keeping the spread of the variant first identified in India under close observation and taking swift action where infection rates are rising.'
Across England, Wales and most of Scotland, people on Monday could once again grab a drink, a bite and dine inside restaurants and cafes. Cinemas, museums and sports venues also opened their doors for the first time in months.
People were able to once again visit each other at home and to head to Portugal, where the British are normally the largest tourist contingent.
'It's nice to get away and be back here,' said Barry Thompson, a 63-year-old retired policeman from Manchester who landed in the southern town of Faro with his wife and son. 'We're very excited.'
In another sign of life returning to normal in Europe, Disneyland Paris announced it would reopen on June 17.
The persistent threat of the coronavirus is casting a shadow on the already delayed Tokyo Olympics, due to begin in less than 10 weeks even with parts of Japan under a state of emergency.
Organisers have insisted that they will go ahead despite the risk, but the opposition was brought into focus Monday when a new poll showed 80 per cent of Japanese were against hosting the Games this year.
Japan's vaccine rollout has been slow despite its wealth, but concerns are growing that poorer nations will be left even further behind because of vaccine inequality.
The WHO chief on Friday asked vaccine-wealthy nations to refrain from giving shots to children and adolescents and instead donate those doses to other nations.
'We are concerned that the deadly spike in India is a precursor to what will happen if those warnings remain unheeded,' Unicef executive director Henrietta Fore said Monday.
In France, pharmaceuticals giant Sanofi reported positive results for a Phase 2 trial of a Covid vaccine it is developing with Britain's GSK, which will enable a late-stage trial to start in the coming weeks. - AFP