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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Lizzy Buchan & Robert Rowlands

England's lockdown lasting until summer not ruled out by Downing Street

Downing Street has not ruled out England's lockdown dragging on until the summer.

No10 said today that the Government wanted to ease restrictions "as soon as it is safe to do so".

However, it cautioned that all evidence would be kept "under review" when asked if restrictions could last into the summer, the Mirror Online reports.

On a visit to flood-hit communities in the north-west of England, Boris Johnson said it was "too early to say" when restrictions could be lifted.

When he announced the third national lockdown earlier this month, he promised to review the national restrictions in mid-February.

However, Downing Street warned that easing restrictions could only happen when transmission rates have fallen and pressure on the NHS has reduced.

Furthermore, the Prime Minister's official spokesman said the success of the vaccine roll-out was key to lockdown being eased.

Asked if the PM intended to make this the final lockdown, his spokesman said: "We obviously hope it's the last national lockdown.

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"I would point to what the Prime Minister has said previously that this is something that no Prime Minister would ever want to have to do but it has been necessary given the transmission rate of the virus and the pressure that the NHS is now sadly facing, and also sadly the number of people sadly dying from the disease.

"Of course it is our intention and our hope that this will be the last national lockdown but as we've said previously, we need to reduce the transmission rate of the virus, we need to relieve the pressure on the NHS and I would point to the vaccination programme that we have introduced and we have rolled out up and down the country as one of the ways out of this."

Asked to rule out the lockdown lasting into the summer, the spokesman said: "We will continue to keep all of the scientific evidence and data under review.

"It remains our position that we want to ease restrictions as soon as it is safe to do so but in order for us to do that, we need to see the transmission rates of the virus come down and we need to see the pressure on the NHS reduced."

Mr Johnson struck a cautious note on a visit to Didsbury, south Manchester, where he went to see the floods caused by Storm Cristoph.

"I think it's too early to say when we'll be able to lift some of some of the restrictions," he told reporters.

"What we're seeing in the ONS data, in the REACT survey, we're seeing the contagiousness of the new variant that we saw arrive just before Christmas.

"There's no doubt it does spread very fast indeed."

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