Reopening schools national effort to beat Covid: UK PM

London: UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson described the reopening of schools in England as a “national effort” to beat coronavirus, even though some experts warned that the country is still not “out of the woods”.

On February 22, Johnson had announced his long-anticipated “roadmap” exiting the lockdown, under which schools in England are scheduled to reopen from March 15 as the first part of the four-step plan, Xinhua news agency reported.

According to the Prime Minister, the plan was designed to be “cautious but irreversible”.

Under the guidance, secondary schools students across England are to receive three Covid-19 lateral-flow tests before using at-home kits twice a week.

Speaking to Sky News, Johnson said: “The reopening of schools marks a truly national effort to beat this virus.

“It is because of the determination of every person in this country that we can start moving closer to a sense of normality — and it is right that getting our young people back into the classroom is the first step.”

However, experts have warned Britain is “still not out of the woods” amid concerns over new variants and the risks of the public breaching restriction rules.

“We have done fantastically well in the last couple of months but we are not completely out of the woods yet,” Britain’s National Statistician Ian Diamond said on March 6.

“I’m very much of the view that we should do everything we can not to blow it nationally,” Diamond added.

Image courtesy of (Wikimedia)

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