England will enter a second coronavirus lockdown beginning on Thursday that is scheduled to run until early December, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Saturday.
All pubs and restaurants will close along with nonessential retail shops, and different households will be banned from mixing indoors. In addition, outbound international travel will be prohibited, except for work, while schools and universities will remain open.
“The virus is spreading even faster than the reasonable worst-case scenario of our scientific advisors, whose models … now suggest unless we act, we could see deaths in this country running at several thousand a day,” Johnson said in an address to the nation.
The decision is yet another U-turn for Johnson, who had refused to impose a second lockdown, saying it would be a disaster for the country. It comes after a summer when life largely returned to normal and cases nationwide fell below 600 a day. But the virus began to rebound in August and the government said there are now about 50,000 new cases a day.
The resurgence appears to have been driven by a failure of some people to adequately social distance over the summer. One study also suggests that British travelers brought back a strain of the virus from holidays in Spain.