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The UK health secretary has admitted that measures previously in force under ‘Tier 3’ are no longer sufficient to contain the new strain of the virus as he failed to rule out another national lockdown amid soaring infection rates.

Speaking on Monday morning, British health secretary Matt Hancock told Sky News that the government is not “ruling anything out” amid calls from the opposition leader, Keir Starmer, to introduce a national lockdown within 24 hours.

“This new variant is much easier to catch, it is much more transmissible, and we’re now seeing the effect of that in lots of different parts of the country, unfortunately,” the health secretary said.

It is down to people’s behaviour, frankly. What matters is, yes of course, the rules that we put in place, but it is also about how people act.

Hancock added that Tier 3, previously the highest of England’s tier system before the introduction of a fourth, stricter tier, is no longer sufficient to contain the virus as it is believed that most of the infections in the UK are caused by the new, highly infectious strain. 

The health secretary also highlighted his concerns about the emergence of the ‘South African variant’ in the UK, noting that it could be “even more of a problem” than the British strain which is already highly prevalent across the country.

Hancock’s comments come after the Labour leader, Starmer, called on the government to introduce a new national lockdown within 24 hours on Sunday.

“I say bring in those restrictions now, national restrictions within the next 24 hours. That has to be the first step to controlling the virus,” Starmer asserted, claiming that the virus is “clearly out of control.” 

Speaking earlier on Sunday, Prime Minister, Boris Johnson had also hinted at the introduction of new, tougher measures.

“It may be that we need to do things in the next few weeks that may be tougher. I’m fully reconciled to that. I think the whole country is fully reconciled to that,” Johnson told the BBC. 

Monday also marks the start of the UK’s inoculation programme with the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. Health authorities there have been warned that they may need to immunise as many as two million each week to avoid a “catastrophic” start to the new year.

On Sunday, authorities registered 54,990 infections and 454 new deaths.

In total there have been 2,654,779 cases recorded in the UK since the start of the pandemic and 75,024 deaths.

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