Covid in Scotland: Glasgow to remain in level three lockdown

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image copyrightPA Media
image captionMany Glasgow business have spend the past nine months under strict Covid restrictions

Glasgow will continue to be the only part of Scotland under level three restrictions for at least another week.

There had been speculation that the city would be able to join the rest of the Scottish mainland in level two.

But First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said there was still concern about an outbreak of the Indian variant of the virus in the city.

She said the variant was now accounting for about half of the new Covid cases in Glasgow.

Ms Sturgeon said it was hoped the city would be able to move to level two on Saturday of next week.

And she said there were signs that the situation in Glasgow was beginning to stabilise, with the number of new cases falling in recent days in the postcode areas in the southside of the city which had been at the centre of the outbreak of the Indian variant.

The level three restrictions mean people are not allowed to meet in each other's homes, and pubs and restaurants are not able to sell alcohol indoors.

Many Glasgow business owners say they are struggling to survive after spending 270 days under tough restrictions, and have criticised the Scottish government for not giving them more financial support.

And opposition parties had demanded urgent action to get the city back on a level footing with the rest of the country - where restrictions have eased in recent weeks - as quickly as possible.

The rest of mainland Scotland is currently due to join most of the country's island communities in level one on 7 June, before the country moves to level zero - meaning something close to normality - on 28 June.

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image captionMobile testing and vaccination centres have been set up in Glasgow to help bring the outbreak under control

Mobile testing and vaccination centres have been set up in many parts of Glasgow over the past few weeks.

And there has been no significant increase in the number of people being hospitalised with the virus - which public health experts say suggests that it is mainly younger, unvaccinated people who are contracting it.

However, case numbers have risen by about 30% - from 112 cases per 100,000 to about 136 per 100,000 - over the past week, while the rate of positive tests has also crept up from about 4% to 4.4%.

The R number - effectively the rate at which the virus spreads - for Scotland is now estimated to stand at about 1.3, largely driven by the number of cases in Glasgow.

Ms Sturgeon said the decision to keep Scotland's largest city in level three for a further week had been "very difficult".

But she said the number of new cases continued to be "uncomfortably high" despite the signs of progress.

The first minister added: "The view of the National Incident Management Team is that it would be premature to move Glasgow out of level three immediately, while the situation remains so fragile."

However, if the situation continues to stabilise, Ms Sturgeon said the management team would support a move to level two at the end of next week.

Responding to the announcement, the Federation of Small Business said its members in Glasgow had become "used to these weekly Friday disappointments" - with this one "even more galling" because of the sunny weather that is forecast for the Bank Holiday on Monday.

Its chairman, Andrew McRae, said: "The businesses and employees hardest hit by these ongoing restrictions need proper support now.

"The Glasgow hospitality industry was given two days to scrap their re-opening plans (earlier this month) - but even now, after two weeks, we still don't have adequate financial support measures in place."

The Scottish government says further funding has been made available to Glasgow City Council to provide additional support for businesses in hospitality and leisure in Glasgow, with grants ranging from £250 to £750 per week.

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image captionIt is thought that many of the people contracting Covid in Glasgow are from younger age groups who have not yet been vaccinated

The first minister will also give an update next Tuesday on whether, and to what extent, the proposed move to level one for mainland council areas will proceed as planned.

She said: "If we see a significant reduction in the health harms of Covid, even as case numbers rise, then hopefully that will allow us to change our approach.

"Because we will be able to rely then on other public health measures, rather than blanket restrictions, to keep the outbreaks under control."

The number of people in hospital with the virus has increased from 68 three weeks ago to 90 today - but there were more than 2,000 people in hospital at the peak of the second wave in January, and the number of Covid patients in intensive care is currently very low.

The first minister said she had considered whether additional restrictions needed to be introduced in three other council areas - Clackmannanshire, Renfrewshire and East Renfrewshire - where there are relatively high levels of the virus.

But all three areas have relatively low populations and the number of cases is low in absolute terms - with public health teams confident that the outbreaks are able to be controlled using existing measures.

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