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Johnson Closes U.K. Schools and Threatens to Lock Down London

U.K. schools will close from Friday after restrictions on the population were tightened in the battle against coronavirus.

Johnson Closes U.K. Schools and Threatens to Lock Down London
Boris Johnson, U.K. prime minister, gestures while speaking during a coronavirus news conference inside number 10 Downing Street in London, U.K. (Photographer: Eddie Mulholland/The Daily Telegraph/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) --

U.K. schools will close from Friday after Prime Minister Boris Johnson tightened restrictions on the population in the battle against coronavirus.

As the disease spreads, Johnson warned he could impose strict controls on people in London and elsewhere if it’s necessary to counter the disease, which has taken 104 lives in the U.K. so far.

The decision to shut schools and the threat of a lock-down in the capital city came with Britain now in the grip of the pandemic that has spread rapidly around the world. Johnson has faced critics who wanted him to take stronger measures, sooner.

Johnson Closes U.K. Schools and Threatens to Lock Down London

As he announced that schools will shut until further notice, the premier insisted he was acting at the right time, on the advice of the government’s top scientists. And amid concerns that Londoners may be ignoring his calls to stay away from pubs and work at home, he bluntly told the public: “Everyone must follow the advice.”

Failure to slow the contagion -- especially in areas like London where it has taken hold fastest -- may require tighter controls on the movement of people, he said.

Liberty

“We live in a land of liberty as you know, and it’s one of the great features of our lives that we don’t tend to impose those sorts of restrictions on people,” Johnson told reporters in London. “But I have to tell you, we will rule nothing out.”

The U.K. is escalating its response as the virus takes hold. Johnson this week described his administration as a “wartime government” and Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak announced 350 billion pounds ($404 billion) worth of state-backed loans, grants and tax cuts to help keep businesses afloat during the crisis.

On Wednesday, Sunak said the government would go further, with officials “looking at every conceivable tool” at their disposal. “We stand ready to do what it takes,” he told a panel of lawmakers when asked about the possibility of the government bailing out struggling firms by buying them or stakes in them.

Isolation

With the pound plunging to its lowest level against the dollar since 1985, further measures intended to stop the virus spreading quickly across the country could include restricting the movement of people in London, though such steps are not likely before Friday at the earliest, one official said.

Johnson’s spokesman, James Slack earlier told reporters the government already has power that “allows for individuals to be kept in isolation for their own safety.”

In other developments:

  • Coronavirus cases rose to 2,626 from 1,950 a day earlier, with the Press Association putting the national death toll at 104
  • The government plans to introduce a law to protect private renters from eviction if the crisis means they can’t keep up payments
  • The government said it would ramp up testing for coronavirus to 25,000 a day in coming weeks, from 5,000 a day last week
  • Johnson also dismissed suggestions he should delay the completion of Brexit, saying the deadline for leaving the European Union’s single market is fixed in law at the end of the year

The premier has been under fire for not moving more quickly to close schools, while other countries have stepped in sooner with tougher action to halt the spread of the virus.

The latest announcement covers English schools, which have a total of 8.7 million students. Administrators in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales announced similar closures on Wednesday.

Exams in high schools scheduled for May and June have been called off. Exam boards may need to decide how to award grades to students who do not take formal written tests.

School sites will be kept open for the children of “key workers,” including medical staff, emergency services workers and delivery drivers, throughout the normal Easter holiday period. The government aims to publish the full list of key workers later this week.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.