England lifts Omicron restrictions

People wearing face masks walk over Westminster Bridge after new measures were announced yesterday due to Omicron coronavirus variant, in London, Britain, November 28, 2021. REUTERS FILE PHOTO
‘Traumatic’
England previously lifted restrictions on July 19, so-called “Freedom Day”, but then introduced new rules as the Omicron wave arrived. Health minister Sajid Javid credited the country’s booster programme for allowing restrictions to be lifted. “Our vaccines, testing and antivirals ensure we have some of the strongest defences in Europe and are allowing us to cautiously return to Plan A, restoring more freedoms to this country,” he said. From Thursday, passengers on London’s transport network will still be required to wear face masks but they will no longer be mandatory in secondary school classrooms. “It was traumatic for them, they couldn’t hear the teachers, the teachers couldn’t hear them,” Hynes said of the mask rules in school. US holidaymaker Ethan Letson, 24, agreed with London Mayor Sadiq Khan’s decision to mandate face coverings on the capital’s trains and buses. “I still wear the mask on public transport, I will wear it in very crowded areas like the Underground. It’s so tight down there, you could get sick at any time,” he said. Unlike Scotland and Wales, which set their own health policy, England kept nightclubs and bars open over the festive period. But businesses still took a heavy hit as punters stayed at home. Hospitality workers in the business district around St Paul’s said things had only just started to improve. “The last week, business has started to pick up again. Around Christmas it was dead,” said bartender Lewis Colby, 39. “People aren’t so scared anymore, trains are busier coming into work, people are starting to drink more.” Despite the lifting of restrictions, those who test positive for coronavirus must still self-isolate for a minimum of five days. Johnson said he also hopes to scrap those rules when they expire on March 24.
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