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Back at work, Boris Johnson urges patience over Britain’s lockdown

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson makes a statement on his first day back at work in London after recovering from a bout with the coronavirus.
(Frank Augstein / AP)
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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson urged his lockdown-weary nation to be patient, saying Monday that easing social and economic restrictions too soon would create a second deadly spike of coronavirus infections.

On his first day back at work in three weeks after a bout of COVID-19 that left him dangerously ill, Johnson said Britain had reached the moment of “maximum risk” in its outbreak.

Speaking outside his 10 Downing St. office, Johnson said the country was reaching “the end of the first phase of this conflict” but warned that a quick end to a lockdown due to last at least until May 7 was not in sight.

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“I refuse to throw away all the effort and the sacrifice of the British people and to risk a second major outbreak and huge loss of life and the overwhelming of the [healthcare system],” said Johnson.

The 55-year-old leader appeared thinner but better rested than when he was last seen in public early this month.

One of Boris Johnson’s nurses said caring for the coronavirus-stricken British leader didn’t faze her because of her experience in intensive care.

As of Sunday, Britain had recorded 20,732 deaths among people hospitalized with COVID-19, becoming the fifth country in the world to surpass 20,000 deaths. Thousands more are thought to have died in nursing homes during the pandemic.

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Despite the death toll, Johnson’s government is under mounting pressure to set out a blueprint for easing the lockdown that has sharply curtailed business and daily life since March 23.

More than 1.5 million Britons have applied for welfare benefits in the past month, and the government’s economic watchdog says the economy could shrink by 35% by June 1.

In signs of lockdown fatigue, the volume of road traffic has begun to creep up, and businesses including construction sites and home-supply stores have begun to reopen after introducing social-distancing measures.

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Britain’s ethnic minorities, including a number of healthcare workers, are disproportionately represented in the nation’s coronavirus death toll.

As other European countries begin to reopen businesses and schools, Johnson said he shared Britons’ impatience to get back to normality. But he said, “We simply cannot spell out now how fast or slow or even when those changes will be made.”

Johnson indicated that any loosening of the lockdown would happen in stages, as authorities “begin gradually to refine the economic and social restrictions and one by one to fire up the engines of this vast U.K. economy.”

Johnson spent a week in St. Thomas’ Hospital in London earlier this month, including three nights in intensive care. When he was discharged April 13, he thanked medical workers at the hospital for saving his life, saying his condition “could have gone either way.”

The coronavirus is taking an emotional and physical toll on staff in Britain’s nursing homes, who often feel they’re toiling on a forgotten front line.

During his absence, Johnson’s Conservative government has struggled to counter criticism over shortages of protective equipment for medical workers and a lack of testing for the virus. The government has promised to conduct 100,000 coronavirus tests a day by the end of April, but has yet to reach even 30,000 a day.

Countering claims that the government had been secretive, Johnson promised that decisions about ending the lockdown would be made “with the maximum possible transparency” and in consultation with businesses, regional authorities and opposition parties.

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