Covid-19: Masks still expected to be worn indoors after 19 July – Zahawi

People in England should still wear masks in many indoor settings even after the Covid rules are lifted, the vaccines minister has said.

The PM is due to confirm on Monday whether most of England’s lockdown rules – including the legal requirement for masks – will end on 19 July.

But Nadim Zahawi said there would still be “an expectation” for people to wear masks in crowded spaces such as trains.

Labour said it was “irresponsible” to lift the legal requirement for masks.

The legal need to wear a face covering in certain places is due to remain, for the time being, in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

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Speaking on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show, Mr Zahawi said wearing masks “will help the whole country”.

He added the government wanted to stress both “both a personal responsibility and a corporate responsibility” with regards to masks.

“The guidelines will be very clear on things like mask-wearing. There’s an expectation of people to wear masks indoors, in crowded places, on public transport.”

“The fortification of the vaccine programme has allowed us to cautiously move to step four [of the lockdown easing], and the PM will say more about this [on Monday],” he said.

“The guidelines will be very clear on things like mask-wearing. There’s an expectation of people to wear masks indoors, in crowded places, on public transport.”

Pressed on whether this was a change in stance, Mr Zahawi said: “We’re moving from ‘you must’ to ‘you are expected’ to wear a mask in indoor spaces.”

‘Irresponsible’

It comes after Health Secretary Sajid Javid told the Sunday Telegraph anyone who would not wear a mask in an enclosed space was “just being irresponsible”.

But Labour’s shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said: “Given Sajid Javid now considers it irresponsible to not wear masks then it would be equally irresponsible for his government to carry on with the plan to lift mask requirements while infections are heading to 100,000 a day.”

The debate over masks amid concerns over the move to end most of England’s remaining curbs later this month.

Mr Javid has previously warned that virus cases could reach 100,000 a day over the summer, if the ending of restrictions goes ahead as planned on 19 July.

If that does happen, then hospital admissions could reach 2,500 a day, according to statistician Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter.

Prof Spiegelhalter told Andrew Marr it was “absolutely inevitable” that the UK would soon experience “a big wave of cases”.

He said the hospital admission estimate was “very high” but “considerably lower” than the peak of the second wave.”

Patients would also likely be younger and therefore require shorter stays in hospital, Prof Spiegelhalter added.

Asked whether the NHS could cope with such an eventuality, Mr Zahawi said: “The NHS, I think, can deal with this cautious but pragmatic reopening of the economy.”

 

Graph showing number of coronavirus cases in the UK

 

 

Graph showing fewer people being admitted to hospital than during autumn 2020

 

Despite the expected rise in hospital admissions, Mr Javid said what had “shocked” him the most since taking office two weeks ago was a warning about NHS waiting lists in England.

Currently, some 5.3 million people are waiting for routine operations and procedures in England – but Mr Javid warned that could more than double.

He said officials told him: “It could go as high as 13 million.”

On Saturday, the UK recorded 32,367 new cases and 34 deaths within 28 days of a positive test.

It is the fourth day in a row case numbers have been above 30,000, while Friday saw the highest daily figure since 22 January.

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