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Crowds at UK shops as rules eased

By JULIAN SHEA in London | China Daily Global | Updated: 2020-06-17 10:31
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A sales clerk fits a young girl with a new pair of shoes under a perspex screen at a shoe shop in Southampton, on the south coast of England, on Monday. It was the first day of business for most shops after months of closure due to the coronavirus outbreak. [ADRIAN DENNIS/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE]

High streets and shopping centers across the United Kingdom saw long queues and big crowds on Monday as more shops were allowed to reopen following the relaxing of novel coronavirus lockdown measures.

Social distancing added to the length of many lines, but at the high-profile Nike Town store in Central London, some people pushed and jostled to get in the door, despite wearing face masks as a health precaution.

In the short term at least, shopping will be a very different experience, with most clothing shops shutting fitting rooms, and many stores having to decontaminate items that are handled but not bought.

At Monday's daily media briefing, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the government was "sticking to its plan" and that progress on further easing the lockdown would be "based on strict conditions".

"We can't just pretend that coronavirus has gone away or we've eliminated the virus," he said, as he announced that an additional 38 deaths had taken the total of COVID-19 deaths with a positive test to 41,736.

"There is a risk of a second spike if we're not very careful."

Face masks, which have become an increasingly common sight over the last few months, are now compulsory on public transport in England. Passengers who refuse to put them on could be prevented from boarding or face fines.

With public transport use still being discouraged, face masks may become even more advisable as the lifting of the lockdown could cause an increase in the use of private transport, with a consequent impact on air quality levels, if the UK follows the pattern of other European countries.

Air quality

Across the UK, the lockdown has led to a dramatic improvement in air quality, and government at all levels faces a challenge on how to keep up this level of improvement.

"The link between vehicle traffic and pollution is well understood and there has been an obvious reduction in vehicles moving around the city during the lockdown," Anna Richardson, the convener for sustainability and carbon reduction in the Scottish city of Glasgow, told the BBC.

Mental health has also been impacted by the lockdown. Data published by the Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Essex has revealed women are suffering more as a result of the social impact of the pandemic.

While the world of commerce may be stirring back to life, many social restrictions remain in place, and people are working from home or on furlough, with women appearing to be facing the most strain as a result of being deprived of socializing opportunities.

"It's well documented that women have drawn the short straw on several different fronts," said economist Ben Etheridge, one of the compilers of the study.

Issues such as increased childcare and domestic expectations are also taking their toll.

"Women are more likely to report multiple numbers of close friends," he said, so being denied that usual contact is having a greater impact on them than on men.

The survey revealed that the group whose mental health was being most affected was women under the age of 30. The least affected group was men aged between 50 and 69.

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