Northern Ireland to enter six-week COVID-19 lockdown on December 26
DUBLIN (Reuters) – Northern Ireland will enter a six-week lockdown starting Dec. 26 in a bid to contain a surge in COVID-19 cases, Deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill announced on Thursday.
The British region has been in and out of some form of lockdown since mid-October when it was one of Europe’s worst COVID-19 hotbeds. The most recent curbs were lifted last week, when all shops, restaurants and pubs serving food reopened.
All non-essential shops, pubs, bars and restaurants will close on Dec. 26 with the exception of takeaway food services, O’Neill told journalists.
“It will be disappointing to many, but I think a lot of people would also have expected it. It’s very clear that we needed an urgent intervention. I think this is the right decision by the executive,” she said.
Earlier this week television pictures showed patients being treated in the back of ambulances in a Northern Ireland hospital car park, after a warning that COVID-19 was putting healthcare under “unbearable pressures”.
The heads of Northern Ireland’s six healthcare trusts warned on Monday of the very real risk of hospitals being overwhelmed in the event of a further COVID-19 spike in January.
Northern Ireland on Thursday reported 656 new COVID-19 cases, the highest number in five weeks. A total of 1,154 people have died in Northern Ireland died within 28 days of being diagnosed with COVID-19.
The neighbouring Republic of Ireland has the lowest number of cases of any country in the European Union, but officials there on Thursday there warned of a “serious increase” in cases following the easing of restrictions.
New restrictions may be needed before the end of the year, Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said.