Visiting people at home banned in parts of England

By IANS | Published: July 31, 2020 02:07 PM2020-07-31T14:07:40+5:302020-07-31T14:20:07+5:30

London, July 31 Millions of people across northern England will face new lockdown restrictions, which ban separate households ...

Visiting people at home banned in parts of England | Visiting people at home banned in parts of England

Visiting people at home banned in parts of England

London, July 31 Millions of people across northern England will face new lockdown restrictions, which ban separate households from meeting each other at home after a spike in COVID-19 cases, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Friday.

Hancock told the BBC that the government had taken the "targeted" action based on information gathered from contact tracing, which he said showed that "most of the transmission is happening between households visiting each other, and people visiting relatives and friends".

The areas affected by the new measures are Greater Manchester, Blackburn with Darwen, Burnley, Hyndburn, Pendle, Rossendale, Bradford, Calderdale, Kirklees and Leicester.

The restrictions mean different households will not be allowed to meet in homes or private gardens.

Individual households will still be able to go to pubs and restaurants but not mix with another household.

The new lockdown rules came into force at midnight.

The restrictions come nearly four weeks after restrictions were eased across England, allowing people to meet indoors for the first time since late March.

In Leicester, where a local lockdown has been in place for the last month, pubs, restaurants and other facilities will be allowed to reopen in the city from August 3, as some of the stricter measures are lifted, Hancock told the BBC.

Cinemas and museums will also be able to open in Leicester and religious ceremonies will be able to take place.

Reacting to Friday's development, Miqdaad Versi, from the Muslim Council of Britain, said the restrictions were likely to have a "large impact" on Muslim families celebrating Eid.

"Unclear why such short notice provided but important that this message is cascaded as quickly as possible," he tweeted.

On Thursday, a further 38 people in the UK died, bringing the total number of COVID-19 associated deaths to 45,999.

And 846 cases were reported - the highest number of cases in a day for a month, which took the total to 303,910.

( With inputs from IANS )

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