UK’s Johnson defends virus strategy as infections soar
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson defended his
handling of the coronavirus pandemic on Sunday despite weeks of rising
infections, but warned that the country faced a “bumpy” winter ahead.
Britain has Europe’s highest coronavirus death toll,
at more than 42,400, and Johnson’s Conservative government is facing criticism
from all sides. Opponents say tougher social restrictions are needed to
suppress a second wave of COVID-19 that is already sweeping the country. But
many in Johnson’s right-of-center party argue that restrictions must be eased
to save the battered economy.
Johnson told the BBC the government had to strike a
difficult balance and he couldn’t “take a course that could expose us to tens
of thousands more deaths in very short order.”
“It is a moral imperative to save lives ... but on
the other hand, we have to keep our economy moving. That is the balance that we
are trying to strike,” he said.
Britain went into a national lockdown in March, with
most businesses closed and all but essential travel barred. Restrictions began
to be lifted in June as the pandemic tide receded. But like other European
countries, daily new coronavirus infections began to rise again when pubs and
restaurants reopened, children went back to school and students returned to
university.
The U.K. is now under national restrictions on
socializing, including a 10 p.m. curfew for bars and restaurants, and groups
limited to six, with areas of high infection facing stricter local measures,
which Johnson and other ministers have sometimes struggled to explain clearly.
Critics say months of mixed messages and changes of advice on everything from
wearing masks to whether or not to work from home has left people confused and
exhausted.
A national test-and-trace program to find people who
have been exposed to the virus has also had persistent problems, and is failing
to reach more than a quarter of infected people’s contacts.
Keir Starmer, leader of the opposition Labour Party,
accused the government of “serial incompetence.”
“The prime minister is governing in hindsight,”
Starmer told the Observer newspaper. “So he charges forward, not recognizing
the problem, has a car crash, looks in the rear mirror and says: ‘What’s all
that about?’”
Britain recorded 12,872 new coronavirus infections
on Saturday, by far the highest daily total since the outbreak began, although
the figure includes a backlog of previously unreported cases. The daily number
can’t directly be compared to U.K.’s peak in April because many more tests are
being performed now.
The number of hospitalizations and deaths in Britain
is also rising, but remains far below the U.K.’s springtime peak. Another 49
COVID-19 deaths were reported on Saturday, compared to almost 1,000 a day at
the height of the outbreak.
Johnson acknowledged that many people feel “fatigue”
after months of restrictions and expressed hope that progress on vaccines and
testing would “change the scientific equation” in the next few months, allowing
a return to normality.
But he warned “it’s going to continue to be bumpy
through to Christmas. It may even be bumpy beyond.”



