Leicester - Britain has imposed
a stringent lockdown on the English city of Leicester following
a local flare-up of the novel coronavirus just as Prime Minister
Boris Johnson attempts to nudge the United Kingdom back to
normality.
The United Kingdom has been one of the world's worst-hit
areas, with more than 54,000 suspected deaths, though infections
have been waning in recent weeks and Johnson is rolling back
nationwide restrictions to revive the economy.
However, in Leicester, in the eastern Midlands of England,
the seven-day infection rate was 135 cases per 100,000 people,
three times higher than the next highest city.
Leicester accounted for 10% of all positive cases in England
in the past week, the government said.
"We will be bringing forward a legal change very shortly, in
the next couple of days, because some of the measures that we've
unfortunately had to take in Leicester will require a legal
underpinning," Health Secretary Matt Hancock told Sky.
Asked if some aspects of the lockdown would be enforced by
the police, he said: "Yes, in some cases."
The Leicester lockdown was overshadowing a major speech by
Johnson later on Tuesday in Dudley, just 50 miles away, in which
he will detail plans to rebuild the British economy after it was
battered by the coronavirus lockdown.
Hancock said the government was still analysing the exact
reasons behind the rise of cases in Leicester.
However, city mayor Peter Soulsby said it had been hard to
get details from the government and even the exact boundaries of
the lockdown.
"It's obviously going to be quite a challenge enforcing it,"
Soulsby told Sky. "Policing it is going to be something of a
challenge until we know actually what the area is to be
policed."
Schools in the city, where the remains of King Richard III
of England were found under a car park in 2012, will close from
Thursday with Hancock saying there had been an unusually high
incidence of infections in children there.
"In the very significant testing that we've brought into
Leicester ... We have seen a number of positive cases in the
under 18s and that's why we took the decision with a heavy heart
to close schools in Leicester," Hancock said.