UK’s Johnson threatens to impose restrictions on Manchester
LONDON — Prime Minister Boris Johnson threatened to force the Greater Manchester region into the most severe level of COVID-19 restrictions after local officials refused to accept the government’s financial package to implement measures targeting areas with the highest infection rates.
Johnson says action is needed as case numbers and hospitalizations are rising rapidly. He appealed to leaders to reconsider and engage constructively with the government — heaping pressure on Greater Manchester’s mayor, Andy Burnham.
“I cannot stress enough: time is of the essence. Each day that passes before action is taken means more people will go to hospital, more people will end up in intensive care and tragically more people will die,” Johnson said during a news conference in London. “Of course, if agreement cannot be reached I will need to intervene in order to protect Manchester’s hospitals and save the lives of Manchester’s residents. But our efforts would be so much more effective if we work together.”
Johnson this week introduced a three-tier regional approach to combating the coronavirus pandemic, with each tier bringing in progressively tighter restrictions. The government is trying to slow rising infection rates and prevent the National Health Service from being swamped with COVID-19 cases this winter while seeking to avoid a national lockdown that would ravage the U.K.’s struggling economy