tv The Papers BBC News May 11, 2020 10:30pm-10:44pm BST
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welcome to bbc news. basis our flying in july. it's now time for us to take a look at that first national i think we will have to review that and international in the papers. based on what the prime minister said yesterday. a around 100,000 people have arrived in the uk since the lockdown began seven weeks ago. 0pposition mps say the government failed to prevent more cases getting in. there were cases conceded hello and welcome to a look at head all across the country over a period and what the papers will be bringing of months by not taking measures at the border and us and what the papers will be bringing quarantining earlier. us tomorrow. the government says the relatively with me are deputy leader writer small numbers of flights at the sun 0livia utley and lance and passengers means the number price, political commentator & former labour party director of cases of the virus of communications. which could have come in would have tomorrow's front pages, starting with. .. let's start with the telegraph, had a minimal impact on the overall prevalence of covid—19 in the uk. and it says that borisjohnson is urging the public to use "solid, the travel quarantine is expected to take effect british common sense" at the end of this month. amid questions over his strategy to ease the lockdown. the financial times calls it "a day of confusion" if people cannot provide an address and says the prime minister when they arrive then is facing a backlash for risking they will have to self—isolate the safety of workers, in government accommodation. tom burridge, bbc news, in his bid to get them back to work. the metro focuses on stansted airport. some of the loopholes within the pm's plan
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with questions raised over how men in lower—paid jobs, such people can see their parents. as security guards and bus drivers, are among those most likely to die from coronavirus, the daily mail welcomes the fact according to new data. that people in england will be able to see loved ones again, albeit while observing the office for national statistics social distancing. has been analysing mortality figures the times focuses on the same angle, for england and wales up to april 20th. so with the government encouraging it says people in england will be able to play sports or socialise people in england to go to work if they have to, outside with a friend or family how can they make sure they stay safe? member, under the new rules. 0ur science editor david the safety of workers must be put shukman has more details. first, says the mirror with particular concerns over people on the lowest income. in the commuter crush this morning, the common sense message a flurry of new policies. is on the front page first the london transport of the express too authorities are urging people which quotes the prime minister's warning, that to cover their faces, then the national government doing the same. all this amid concerns about safety. it's a "perilous time". so how much do we know about which jobs are most and the guardian leads with at risk from the virus? criticism from labour leader, sir keir starmer, that boris johnson plans fails to give the public clear well, security guards suffer the highest rates directions on a path through the crisis. of death from covid—19. so let's begin... we will start with the daily that is according to early analysis by the office for national statistics. telegraph. use good solid british common sense the prime minister and the world health organization
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tells the public. 0livia, it almost says that the more direct contact there is, the greater feels that the telegraph had to burrow into all that he said to find the risk of dying. ra njith chandra pala a slogan perhaps he might‘ve wanted was a bus driver. to choose in the first place? yes. i his route took him to ealing hospital in west london. think the problem is that a he died of covid—19 earlier this common—sense approach would be fine month and his daughter leshie the prime minister had said we are says his colleagues are now nervous. not going to go with strippers any they are really scared. more, what the dangers are we will they are scared to go to work. treat you like adults and you can go about your life as you choose just but they are decent human beings and be aware that there is a seriously contagious virus. that would be one they are professionals, you know. way of approaching it. but he hasn't done that. what he's done or said and they will keep doing theirjobs and they will keep putting use your common sense, but if you their lives at risk to keep this city moving. get it wrong and you don't do what i so, what are the best ways wa nted to stay safe at work? get it wrong and you don't do what i wanted to do than the police will find you. so itjust doesn't seem this animation shows how a cough can spread the virus in a supermarket. like a very coherent message. yes, common sense is one way to go but the most obvious option that's not the way he's chosen to is trying to stay apart. go. he's chosen to go with the many places are now marking out rules. so the rules have to be the two metre distance. pretty clearly delineated otherwise people will be fined unfairly. lance but where that is not possible, wearing a face covering might be the answer. price, borisjohnson people will be fined unfairly. lance price, boris johnson and people will be fined unfairly. lance price, borisjohnson and his allies the busier the place, gave britain a slogan take back
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the greater the risk. control. that won the brexit with any individual contact, referendum. get brexit done, stay at there will be a risk of exposure and risk of transmission. home which was reasonably successful now we are left with a stay alert. with each individual contact, that risk will be fairly low which in the last 25 hours according but if you add enough contacts toa which in the last 25 hours according to a lot of the papers has led to a together, there is enough to risk there to facilitate some lot delete mac huge confusion. yes form of transmission. so, the closer you are together it's a question of the guys who's go at work, the more contact you have at communications. as you say i with people, the more likely found way of articulating the brexit you are to transmit the virus. and all the time the disease is still spreading. less rapidly than before and other issues. yet they seem to but it is out there. so is it the right time to relax have really doubted themselves in the lockdown, as many are hoping? the last 25 hours. yesterday's televised broadcast by the prime the numbers being admitted ministers actually a communications to hospital are down and the rate disaster. i think it confused far of infection has fallen, more people than it helped. it what's called the r number. raised so many questions, his new but inside care homes, the epidemic is declining much more slowly across the uk slogan stay alert control virus save it is a complicated picture. lives. it is being laughed at on the r number, the infection rate, social media. and ridiculed and they is not the same everywhere. for the whole of the uk, we re it is estimated to be 0.5 to 0.9, social media. and ridiculed and they were sort ofjoke videos going around. so the more people had seen crucially below one. above that, the virus the pastiche ease of his message would take off.
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but in scotland it is judged to be than the real message itself. and higher, between 0.7 and one. today he then had to claw back on wales also calculates that and tried to answer some of the a higher rate of 0.8 to 0.9. and for northern ireland, questions that had been left it is the same. unanswered. and at best he only got so getting back to something sort of, halfway down. do you think like normal is a huge challenge and it isn't likely to happen at the same speed he got halfway there, 0livia?|j and in the same way. david shukman, bbc news. think he got halfway there, olivia?” think i would agree that the comms was a bit of a shambles. but i think if you want more information it's quite easy for us in media and about the changes pr world to spend all our time on to the lockdown in england, you can find it on social media and think that is the the bbc news website. world. i'm not quite sure if that's how it really fed through on the as well as details about scotland, public. partially yes, i spoke to a lot of nonpolitical friends who are wales and northern ireland. bit set up at the prime minister for people have been urged to stay top but i'm not sure if it's quite away from beauty spots like lance makes out. it might be and beaches in england because of fears that the new rules from the media bubble. i think he could put rural communities probably can say this, i think there under intense pressure. are very few basic mistakes he made, visit cornwall said the messages obviously, he should have made that coming from ministers were confusing speech when the 50 page document was after the foreign secretary, dominic raab, said people were free published. it was very strange how a to move around england. i7 published. it was very strange how a 17 hour gap when we had the speech the guidelines say people can drive but we didn't have anything to flesh to outdoor open spaces it out with. i
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"irrespective of distance". but we didn't have anything to flesh it outwith. i think that really frustrated people. but i think the police and tourism groups in cumbria have also expressed strong concerns about day trippers, as our correspondent danny savage reports. document itself is quite impressive for those who can be bothered to go through. the problem is that's not the whole of the british population. the lake district is bracing itself. it's actually quite an impressive feat what the government has managed people living here are worried that new guidelines saying that from wednesday, you can drive as far as you want to exercise, will bring an influx of unwelcome visitors. if people are travelling for hours to get here, where are they going to go, where are they going to stay? are they going to sit in all our parks? which is great, but for us as locals, we want to get out. it's using our supermarkets. the other point people here are making is a lack of infrastructure for visitors at the moment. none of the hotels are open. none of these tourist boats are running. all of the toilets are locked up. all the cafes are closed as well. itjust doesn't feel as though areas like this are ready to receive visitors. cumbria's main tourism organisation says it is shocked by
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the predicament the area now faces. the fact that people can travel unlimited distance for their recreation means we can expect a big increase in day visitors here. with our very vulnerable communities and an overstretched nhs, the time for thatjust isn't right at the moment. cumbria police has strictly applied the existing guidelines up until now, stopping and fining people from outside the area coming to the lakes. even they now find themselves at odds with government advice. we're not over this. this is very much a live problem in cumbria, where people are dying in hospitals and care homes today, and we want people to stay away until the time is right to come as tourists and visit the lake district when it will be open for everybody. the authorities and people living here want the lakes and fells to remain deserted for a few more weeks. if not, there's concern about inflamed tensions between locals and visitors. danny savage, bbc news, windermere.
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