‘There are implications!’ Sadiq Khan grilled as London Mayor calls for tougher rules

Sadiq Khan quizzed on his calls for further London restrictions

The London Mayor declared a major incident for the Capital earlier this month over the rising numbers of coronavirus cases and the strain they put on hospitals. Now, together with London Councils, Sadiq Khan is imploring Boris Johnson to immediately implement tougher coronavirus measures – including closing places of worship – or risk putting an “unsustainable strain” on the NHS and public services.

But the Labour Mayor was grilled by the Sky News host on some of his proposals.

Ms Hewson said: “You say you’re not looking at one day’s fluctuation of the figures.

“That seems to be what the Prime Minister is doing, isn’t he, when he says we’re keeping everything under review but we want to see the full data.

“We want to see if the action that’s been taken so far is having an effect before we put tougher restrictions.

“Some of the restrictions you’re talking about here, stopping click and collect, for example, that is a lifeline to some retails.

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“Closing places of worship that play a hugely fundamental part in communities for people.

“There are implications of what you are suggesting.”

He replied: “It seems to be that this Prime Minister has learned nothing over the last year.

“One of the things that it’s quite clear is that going early is far, far better than going late.”

After a major incident was declared in the capital last Friday due to rising COVID-19 cases, Mr Khan and London Councils chair Georgia Gould have written to the Prime Minister calling for measures similar to those in place last March and April.

Aside from the closure of places of worship, they have called for the PM to make mask-wearing mandatory outside the home – including in supermarket queues, on high streets and in other possibly crowded outdoor settings.

Also among four major demands is for the Government to provide greater financial support for Londoners who need to self-isolate and are unable to work, backed by improved asymptomatic testing for key workers.

Sadiq Khan quizzed by BBC host on avoiding London transport

The two leaders also called for the rollout of vaccines across London to be accelerated, and for the provision of daily vaccination data by borough and ethnicity.

“We recognise how difficult these decisions are and how they will impose further tough restrictions on Londoners,” the letter says. “With new levels of infection remaining high we are left with little choice but to ask that you implement them.”

Mr Khan and Ms Gould said places of worship were “crucially important for communities” and that “we wouldn’t be making this request if the situation wasn’t very serious”.

The letter also urges four other more temporary measures: an urgent review of what constitutes essential and non-essential retail, stricter guidance on how retailers can prevent unsafe queues and crowd, prohibiting click and collect services at non-essential retail chains, and stronger guidance on size restrictions for weddings, funerals and similar gatherings.

“The measures we are asking for would need to be kept under regular review, but if they are not introduced as a matter of urgency then we fear that the transmission of the virus will continue to spread across the capital, putting unsustainable strain on our NHS and public services,” the letter says.

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While pledging to support the vaccination rollout, the two leaders urged Mr Johnson to review the distribution formula. They said current plans would leave London and other major cities “with fewer vaccines per head of population compared to less densely populated regions”.

“Currently each Primary Care Network (PCN) in England is receiving an equal distribution of vaccines, despite the huge variations in the size of the populations PCNs serve. We call on you to review this formula and urgently scale up vaccine distribution in London,” the letter says.

While conceding immunising the first four cohorts on the Government’s vaccination priority list “should bring down the mortality rate over the next few weeks and months”, Mr Khan and Ms Gould expressed frustration that it was currently not possible to roll out the vaccine to the next five, mostly younger, cohorts.

“It is these younger groups, the 40 to 60-year-olds, that are presenting at hospitals in large numbers,” the two leaders said.

“It is also this group which is spending longer in hospital because they are less likely to die from the virus, but require longer hospital treatment to recover.

“Our NHS is unable to cope with this level of demand for this duration and ultimately it will end in everyone’s health suffering.”

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