Cases of Indian Covid variant may have DOUBLED in a week in Britain as data shows mutant strain has now been spotted 215 times

  • Data from Government's official Covid variant tracking scheme show B.1.617 strain has been spotted 215 times
  • Suggests one in 200 swabs analysed are positive for Indian variant, which scientists said was 'very troubling'
  • Government has been slammed for allowing thousands of travellers from India to pour into the UK every week
  • Boris Johnson will hold a press conference at 5pm tonight where he will face questions about the travel delay 

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WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE INDIA VARIANT? 

Real name: B.1.617

When and where was it discovered? The variant was first reported by the Indian government in late March. 

But the first cases appear to date back to October 2020. 

It has been detected in 21 countries as of April 19, Public Health England bosses say.

How many people in the UK have been infected with it? Matt Hancock revealed there had been 103 cases so far since it was first spotted on February 22.

But Public Health England's latest report, published on April 15, says 77. These were detected in England and Scotland.

What mutations does it have? It has 13 mutations that separate it from the original Covid virus that emerged in China — but the two main ones are named E484Q and L452R.

Scientists suspect these two alterations can help it to transmit faster and to get past immune cells made in response to older variants. 

Is it more infectious and can it evade vaccines? The L452R mutation is also found on the Californian variant (B.1.429), even though the two evolved independently. It is thought to make the American strain 20 per cent more infectious. 

The E484Q mutation is very similar to the one found in the South African and Brazil variants known as E484K, which can help the virus evade antibodies.

The South African variant is thought to make vaccines about 30 per cent less effective at stopping infections, but it's not clear what effect it has on severe illness.  

Professor Sharon Peacock, of PHE, claimed there was 'limited' evidence of E484Q's effect on immunity and vaccines. Lab studies have suggested it may be able to escape some antibodies, but to what degree remains uncertain.

How deadly is it? Scientists still don't know for sure. But they are fairly certain it won't be more deadly than the current variants in circulation in Britain.  

This is because there is no evolutionary benefit to Covid becoming more deadly. The virus's sole goal is to spread as much as it can, so it needs people to be alive and mix with others for as long as possible to achieve this. 

And, if other variants are anything to go by, the Indian strain should not be more lethal.

There is still no conclusive evidence to show dominant versions like the Kent and South African variants are more deadly than the original Covid strain - even though they are highly transmissible. 

Doctors in India claim there has been a sudden spike in Covid admissions among people under 45, who have traditionally been less vulnerable to the disease.

There have been anecdotal reports from medics that young people make up two third of new patients in Delhi. In the southern IT hub of Bangalore, under-40s made up 58 percent of infections in early April, up from 46 percent last year.

There is still no proof younger people are more badly affected by the new strain. 

Should we be worried? Scientists are unsure exactly how transmissible or vaccine-resistant the Indian variant is because it hasn't been studied thoroughly.

The fact it appears to have increased infectivity should not pose an immediate threat to the UK's situation because the current dominant Kent version appears equally or more transmissible. 

It will take a variant far more infectious strain than that to knock it off the top spot.

However, if the Indian version proves to be effective at slipping past vaccine-gained immunity, then its prevalence could rise in Britain as the immunisation programme squashes the Kent variant. 

The UK currently classes the Indian strain as a 'Variant Under Investigation', a tier below the Kent, South African and Brazilian variants. But there are calls to move it up to the highest category.

Scientists tracking the constantly-evolving virus say it's still not clear if India's third wave has been caused by the variant, or if it emerged at the same time by coincidence.  

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India's troublesome Covid variant has been spotted more than 200 times in Britain, MailOnline can reveal — amid warnings Number 10 was 'weeks too late' with its travel ban.

The most up-to-date data from the Government's official coronavirus variant tracking programme shows 103 infected people have had the mutant strain.

But separate figures published by the same group of experts show the B.1.617 variant has actually been spotted 215 times – with it making up around one in every 200 positive swabs that are analysed.

Scientists said it was a 'very troubling' number and that it was proof the variant was spreading, with 85 per cent of samples detected in the past month.

However, health chiefs say some of the cases will be duplicates because the majority are linked to foreign travel. Everyone flying in to England from India – and anywhere abroad – currently has to take two Covid tests while quarantining at home for 10 days. British experts are currently managing to sequence the majority of positive tests because cases are so low.

The development comes after other scientists and senior Labour politicians slammed the Government for allowing thousands of travellers from India to pour into the UK every week despite knowing about the variant for nearly a month.

Number 10 only announced India was being added to the UK's travel 'red list' yesterday, and the measures don't start until 4am on Friday. At least 5,000 of people are due to arrive in Britain from India before the travel restrictions come into effect, as a desperate scramble to beat the quarantine deadline ensues. 

Amid growing numbers of the variant at home and the spiralling epidemic in India, the Prime Minister has had to cancel a scheduled visit to Delhi next week.

Reacting to the new Indian variant cases, Professor Paul Hunter, an epidemiologist from the University of East Anglia, added: 'It does look like this is growing rather more quickly than it should be while we're in this sort of lockdown.

'It is still a little bit early to know what's really going on with this variant, but the signs are not looking good.'

The data, published by the Covid-19 Genomics UK Consortium, shows the Indian variant has been spotted in every part of the UK except Northern Ireland — with 198 samples in England, 10 in Scotland and seven in Wales.

Professor Hunter said it was 'almost certain' that there are more cases of the Indian variant because it can take two or three weeks for sequences to be analysed and published.     

It is feared B.1.617 spreads easier than older strains and has mutations which help it evade vaccines — but to what degree remains unclear. Scientists do not believe it is any deadlier than the strains currently circulating in Britain.

Doctors in India claim there has been a sudden spike in Covid admissions among people under 45, who have traditionally been less vulnerable to the disease.

There have been anecdotal reports from medics that young people make up two third of new patients in Delhi. In the southern IT hub of Bangalore, under-40s made up 58 percent of infections in early April, up from 46 percent last year.

There is still no proof younger people are more badly affected by the new strain.  

As part of the travel ban, anyone who is not a UK or Irish resident or a British citizen will be banned from entering the country if they have been in India in the last 10 days. British nationals will need to isolate in a quarantine hotel. 

No10's travel ban has sparked a 'desperate frenzy', with families trying to beat the Friday deadline and avoid having to quarantine in a hotel. Travel agents say that a standard £400 economy ticket from India to the UK has soared to £2,000 due to a shortage of seats on planes over the next three days. 

Sixteen direct flights from India — which carried about 300 passengers each before airlines brought in social distancing guidelines — were scheduled to land in the UK between the announcement of the ban yesterday and the deadline coming into action. Thousands more will travel on in-direct routes.

Suresh Kumar, chairman of Indra Travel, told The Telegraph most Britons trying to return are in India on emergency visas for family funerals or weddings or on business, as well as students. 

Universities warned that the travel ban would leave 10,000 international students scrambling to return to UK campuses before Friday.

Vivienne Stern from Universities UK told BBC Radio 4's Today programme the current capacity of quarantine hotels cannot hold all the students expected to return to the country.

She said the Government had not yet made it clear if more hotels would be allowed to open rooms for them. Applications from India next year are up 25 per cent and universities are worried quarantining could put off current students.

As Britons scramble to get back to the UK, travellers have complained of two-hour queues at border control at Heathrow Airport, where five flights from India are due to arrive today.

Labour slammed the Government for not banning arrivals immediately despite the Indian variant being under investigation by UK officials for almost three weeks. Sir Patrick Vallance's predecessor admitted ministers were too slow to respond to the new B.1.617 strain claiming the ban was 'taken a bit too late in truth'. 

The PM is facing growing calls to ease lockdown quicker after there were just four Covid deaths yesterday — the lowest in seven months — and the jab drive hit the milestone of fully vaccinating 10million Brits. A total of 33m have had at least one injection.

The Indian variant was first identified internationally in October and detected in the UK on February 22. Two key mutations set it apart from others – named E484Q and L452R – with both of them found on the 'spike' that the virus uses to latch onto human cells.

These are not thought to be key mutations of any of the other variants on Public Health England's list, but have appeared in virus samples before.

Those alterations are thought to make the virus more transmissible, and lab studies suggest it can escape antibodies — a key part of the body's Covid immune response. But because the E484Q mutation is rare, scientists aren't sure to what degree it will change the way the virus behaves. 

Meanwhile, it emerged today that around 100 people are trying to enter the country each day with a 'fake Covid certificate.

The fake documents claiming a traveller has a recent negative test result are 'very easy' to forge, MPs on a cross party committee on Covid were told. And there is no way to tell how many more are being missed.

Lucy Moreton, professional officer for the Immigration Services Union (ISU), which represents border immigration and customs staff in the UK, also said there is 'little to no' evidence on how well people are adhering to quarantine rules.

No10 only announced India was being added to the UK's travel 'red list' yesterday, and the measures won't come into until 4am on Friday. India is currently battling a second wave of cases, but the numbers per capita are nowhere near levels seen during the UK's winter peak

No10 only announced India was being added to the UK's travel 'red list' yesterday, and the measures won't come into until 4am on Friday. India is currently battling a second wave of cases, but the numbers per capita are nowhere near levels seen during the UK's winter peak

The UK's hugely successful vaccination programme and brutal four-month lockdown has squashed deaths to double-digits. But India's fatalities have started to climb on the back of a spike in infections

 The UK's hugely successful vaccination programme and brutal four-month lockdown has squashed deaths to double-digits. But India's fatalities have started to climb on the back of a spike in infections

Passengers arrive at Heathrow Terminal 2 from Mumbai this afternoon as travel agents warn of a desperate scramble to beat Friday's quarantine deadline
A man arrives at the London airport this afternoon

Passengers arrive at Heathrow Terminal 2 from Mumbai this afternoon as travel agents warn of a desperate scramble to beat Friday's quarantine deadline

Travel agents say that a standard £400 economy ticket from India to the UK has soared to £2,000 due to a shortage of seats on planes over the next three days

Travel agents say that a standard £400 economy ticket from India to the UK has soared to £2,000 due to a shortage of seats on planes over the next three days

Bruna Camasmie complained of two-hour queues at border control at Heathrow Airport, where five flights from India are due to arrive today

Bruna Camasmie complained of two-hour queues at border control at Heathrow Airport, where five flights from India are due to arrive today

Border officials spot 100 fake Covid certificates every day, MPs hear 

Around 100 people are trying to enter the country each day with a 'fake Covid certificate', MPs have heard.

The fake documents claiming a traveller has a recent negative test result are 'very easy' to forge, MPs were told.

And there is no way to tell how many more are being missed.

Lucy Moreton, professional officer for the Immigration Services Union (ISU), which represents border immigration and customs staff in the UK, also said there is 'little to no' evidence on how well people are adhering to quarantine rules.

Meanwhile, MPs heard that long queues found at airports could be a 'breeding ground' for the virus.

And experts raised concerns about the traffic light system for travel.

Ms Moreton told the All Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus that around 20,000 people are coming into the country each day, the majority of whom are hauliers.

To enter England people must provide proof of a negative test taken in the three days before departure – which can be shown to border agents as a printed document or through an email or text message.

Asked how border agents are able to verify proof of a negative test, Ms Moreton told MPs: 'We're not is the simple answer, it's predominately taken on trust.

'We do get 100 or more a day of fake Covid certificates, that we catch.'

Europol warned earlier this year about the illicit sale of false negative Covid test certificates.

This included a forgery ring selling negative test results to passengers at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris, and in the UK fraudsters were caught selling bogus Covid-19 documents showing negative test results for £100 each.

'We catch them if there is a spelling error somewhere,' Ms Moreton said.

But many certificates are in a foreign language which could make spelling mistakes trickier to spot, she added

'Otherwise they are taken at face value,' she added.

She said that the documents are checked against a series of code numbers but 'these things are very easy to knock up electronically unfortunately'.

Asked how many could be falling through the cracks, she added: 'It's inherently unknowable.

'A lot of the border and immigration and migration and quarantine controls are based on trust: we trust people when they say they have not been in a red list country in the last 10 days; we trust people when they say that they are going to 2 Acacia Avenue to quarantine; we trust that there is an Acacia Avenue and that when they are going to go there, they are going to stay there.

'The whole thing is based on an assumption that people will do the right thing.'

Ms Moreton said that it was not possible to segregate people depending on which country they had come from in immigration halls – where people are waiting an average of two to three hours while border agents check their usual travel documentation as well as additional requirements as a result of the pandemic.

She said: 'You've flown on a plane with lots of other people, if you've been in a destination where that in itself has been an international mixing ground, you've come through an airport and then you've stood in the arrivals hall for three or four or five hours – we know it is not possible to segregate people from red, amber and green, they're going to mix – yes there is air conditioning but it is still a confined space, and even if we separated that one risky passenger out at some point in that journey, my understanding is that transmission could have occurred at any point.'

Asked if the process itself is a 'breeding ground for infections', she said: 'Right now, very much so. When it's so slow and the queues are so bad, then it is a risk both to our members and the travellers in those queues.'

Ms Moreton added: 'If you have got someone arriving from a country where you don't have to go into a hotel quarantine, who has managed to catch the virus from someone who does, you may have isolated the person… but the person who bumped shoulders with them in the airport who has just vanished off into the wide blue yonder, you've no way of knowing who that is.'

She said that queues in immigration halls vary, but on average there are two to three hour delays at large locations like Heathrow.

Deenan Pillay, professor of virology at University College London, told MPs that the queues in airports 'makes a nonsense of things'.

'When I see pictures of Heathrow Airport in the immigration hall, indoors, people queuing for hours and hours and then going off to their amber or red quarantine – it makes a nonsense of things,' he said.

Meanwhile, Dr Gabriel Scally, visiting professor of public health at the University of Bristol and a member of the Independent Sage committee, raised concerns about the forthcoming holiday season, saying that holiday destinations could be 'international mixing pots'.

He told the group of parliamentarians: 'I don't believe in reds and greens – I believe in quarantine or not quarantine.

'There is no such thing as a half quarantine – you can't do it by half you either do it properly, or don't bother doing this at all, which of course has been the UK's position for far, far too long.

'We don't know necessarily where someone starts their journey we don't know where they transmitted, we don't know what transport they have used to get to and from particular places.

'And I think this is a particular problem in a holiday season, as we're heading into … which will be an international mixing pot, almost by definition.

'So, whether a country is green or red to me as a public health doctor, I'm not interested in that – I'm interested in managing the isolation of people arriving from abroad at this time.'

None of the experts quizzed by MPs said they would be prepared to embark on international travel at this time.

 

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Professor Hunter said it was unclear if all 215 of the B.1.617 variant reported by COG-UK were the Indian strain.

He told MailOnline the group, tasked with monitoring and studying emerging variants of the virus, may have included some sub-strains which are almost identical to the Indian version but have slight differences in their mutations.

Public Health England updates its variant data every week, which is why its website claims there have only been 77 cases. PHE's last update was on April 14. But ministers have since revealed the true number of cases is 103.

Earlier today, Sharon Peacock, the head of COG-UK and professor of public health and microbiology at the University of Cambridge, tried to calm fears about the strain's spread. 

She highlighted that the Kent variant took off in the UK within weeks of emerging last winter, whereas the Indian variant has been in circulation there since last October.

It suggests India may have suffered its latest wave regardless of which coronavirus was dominant at the time. But Professor Peacock claimed there was enough concern to warrant slowing the number of cases coming into the UK.

'This is an important step in controlling further introduction of this variant into the UK,' she said.

'The number of B.1.617 genomes detected in the UK has risen in the last three weeks.

'Even though this is at or less than 1 per cent of the genomes sequenced in the UK overall, the upward trend in cases warrants action whilst ongoing uncertainties over the level of threat posed by this variant are evaluated.'

She said scientists were also unsure whether the mutations mean the variant can evade the effectiveness of vaccines or natural immunity. 

The Indian variant's E484Q mutation is very similar to the one found in the South African and Brazil variants known as E484K, which can help the virus evade antibodies.

The South African variant is thought to make vaccines about 30 per cent less effective at stopping infections, but it's not clear what effect it has on severe illness. 

Professor Peacock said more work was needed to determine whether the Indian variant should move from being one under investigation, as at present, to a variant of concern.

Professor Sir Mark Walport, former chief scientific adviser to the Government, said he was confident the jab is more transmissible than other strains based on spiralling case numbers in India. 

He also admitted the ban on travel from the country had come too late. 

He told BBC Breakfast: 'These decisions are almost inevitably taken a bit too late, in truth, but what's absolutely clear is that this variant is more transmissible in India.

'You can see that it's becoming the dominant variant, and the other concern about it is that it has a second change in the spike protein which may mean that it's able to be a bit more effective at escaping an immune response, either a natural one or vaccine-induced one, so there's good reasons for wanting to keep it out of the country if at all possible.

'What we need to do is get the population vaccinated and also get booster vaccines prepared that will be able to deal with these new variants – so buying time… against these new variants is really important.' 

Meanwhile, MPs heard today that around 100 people are trying to enter the country each day with a 'fake Covid certificate'.

The fake documents claiming a traveller has a recent negative test result are 'very easy' to forge, MPs were told.

And there is no way to tell how many more are being missed.

Lucy Moreton, professional officer for the Immigration Services Union (ISU), which represents border immigration and customs staff in the UK, also said there is 'little to no' evidence on how well people are adhering to quarantine rules.

Meanwhile, MPs heard that long queues found at airports could be a 'breeding ground' for the virus.

And experts raised concerns about the traffic light system for travel.

Ms Moreton told the All Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus that around 20,000 people are coming into the country each day, the majority of whom are hauliers.

To enter England people must provide proof of a negative test taken in the three days before departure – which can be shown to border agents as a printed document or through an email or text message.

Asked how border agents are able to verify proof of a negative test, Ms Moreton told MPs: 'We're not is the simple answer, it's predominately taken on trust.

'We do get 100 or more a day of fake Covid certificates, that we catch.'

Europol warned earlier this year about the illicit sale of false negative Covid test certificates.

This included a forgery ring selling negative test results to passengers at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris, and in the UK fraudsters were caught selling bogus Covid-19 documents showing negative test results for £100 each.

'We catch them if there is a spelling error somewhere,' Ms Moreton said.

But many certificates are in a foreign language which could make spelling mistakes trickier to spot, she added

'Otherwise they are taken at face value,' she added.

She said that the documents are checked against a series of code numbers but 'these things are very easy to knock up electronically unfortunately'.

Asked how many could be falling through the cracks, she added: 'It's inherently unknowable.

'A lot of the border and immigration and migration and quarantine controls are based on trust: we trust people when they say they have not been in a red list country in the last 10 days; we trust people when they say that they are going to 2 Acacia Avenue to quarantine; we trust that there is an Acacia Avenue and that when they are going to go there, they are going to stay there.

'The whole thing is based on an assumption that people will do the right thing.'

Ms Moreton said that it was not possible to segregate people depending on which country they had come from in immigration halls – where people are waiting an average of two to three hours while border agents check their usual travel documentation as well as additional requirements as a result of the pandemic. 

The Covid variants circulating in the UK:  Matt Hancock revealed yesterday that 103 cases of the Indian variant had been picked up in Britain, but Public Health England's site has not been updated. It still says there have been 77 infections

The Covid variants circulating in the UK:  Matt Hancock revealed yesterday that 103 cases of the Indian variant had been picked up in Britain, but Public Health England's site has not been updated. It still says there have been 77 infections

Boris Johnson, pictured this morning inside No10, will hold a press conference tonight amid growing concerns about the Indian coronavirus variant

Boris Johnson, pictured this morning inside No10, will hold a press conference tonight amid growing concerns about the Indian coronavirus variant

Variant that fully escapes vaccines is a matter of 'when, not if', WHO expert warns 

A coronavirus variant that can fully escape vaccine is a matter of 'when, not if', the World Health Organization (WHO) warned today.

Dr David Nabarro, a special envoy on Covid, said the emergence of strains in Brazil and South African which have been shown to dodge some antibodies were examples of why countries should not completely drop social distancing.

He said the virus will need to be 'treated with respect' for 'quite a lot of months to come', scuppering the UK's hope of getting rid of social distancing in June.

Dr Nabarro told Sky News: 'I want to be clear with you that I personally expect that variants will appear in different parts of the world that are capable of beating the protection offered by the vaccines.

'It's not the case of if, but when. So I'm saying to everybody that I work with, we do have to maintain our respect for this virus. 

'We can beat it, but it means maintaining the physical distance and wearing masks, and also being really good about isolating.

'We're going to have to go on treating it with respect, I'm afraid, for quite a lot of months to come.' 

The Imperial College London scientist warned that even strict travel measures could not stop dangerous variants from making it to British shores. 

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She said: 'You've flown on a plane with lots of other people, if you've been in a destination where that in itself has been an international mixing ground, you've come through an airport and then you've stood in the arrivals hall for three or four or five hours – we know it is not possible to segregate people from red, amber and green, they're going to mix – yes there is air conditioning but it is still a confined space, and even if we separated that one risky passenger out at some point in that journey, my understanding is that transmission could have occurred at any point.'

Asked if the process itself is a 'breeding ground for infections', she said: 'Right now, very much so. When it's so slow and the queues are so bad, then it is a risk both to our members and the travellers in those queues.'

Ms Moreton added: 'If you have got someone arriving from a country where you don't have to go into a hotel quarantine, who has managed to catch the virus from someone who does, you may have isolated the person… but the person who bumped shoulders with them in the airport who has just vanished off into the wide blue yonder, you've no way of knowing who that is.'

She said that queues in immigration halls vary, but on average there are two to three hour delays at large locations like Heathrow.

Deenan Pillay, professor of virology at University College London, told MPs that the queues in airports 'makes a nonsense of things'.

'When I see pictures of Heathrow Airport in the immigration hall, indoors, people queuing for hours and hours and then going off to their amber or red quarantine – it makes a nonsense of things,' he said.

Meanwhile, Dr Gabriel Scally, visiting professor of public health at the University of Bristol and a member of the Independent Sage committee, raised concerns about the forthcoming holiday season, saying that holiday destinations could be 'international mixing pots'.

He told the group of parliamentarians: 'I don't believe in reds and greens – I believe in quarantine or not quarantine.

'There is no such thing as a half quarantine – you can't do it by half you either do it properly, or don't bother doing this at all, which of course has been the UK's position for far, far too long.

'We don't know necessarily where someone starts their journey we don't know where they transmitted, we don't know what transport they have used to get to and from particular places.

'And I think this is a particular problem in a holiday season, as we're heading into … which will be an international mixing pot, almost by definition.

'So, whether a country is green or red to me as a public health doctor, I'm not interested in that – I'm interested in managing the isolation of people arriving from abroad at this time.'

None of the experts quizzed by MPs said they would be prepared to embark on international travel at this time.

Thousands of people will arrive in Britain from India this week before the 'red list' travel restrictions come into effect on Friday, MailOnline's analysis shows.

Seven flights from the country arrived at Heathrow airport yesterday, with at least 16 scheduled to land before the tighter rules come into place.  Flights run by BA, Virgin Atlantic and Air India are due from Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru and Hyderabad. 

Before Friday, travellers from India will have to provide a negative coronavirus test in the three days before flying and then quarantine at home in the UK for ten days. Arrivals can use public transport to travel to their quarantine destination.

From Friday, only British or Irish nationals, or those with UK residence rights, can enter on flights from India. They will have to quarantine in a hotel for ten days.

Earlier this year, amid concerns about the Kent variant, India limited flights between the countries to 30 a week, compared with almost 70 previously. 

Suresh Kumar, chairman of Indra Travel, a family firm he set up 42 years ago, told The Telegraph that ticket prices had soared up to five times as Brits rush to avoid quarantining in a hotel when they return.

He said: 'It's become very busy and flights are not available due to the demand. Prices are four or five times what they were last week.

'A normal £400 economy seat from Delhi is [now] anything up to £2,000. Even if you go for business or first class, there are not many around. They are over £3,000. There was concern India was going to be added but it was still quite a shock. People are concerned and desperate to get back and in a frenzy.'

Labour slammed No10 for delaying the India ban, claiming that it had put British lives in danger and risked sparking more outbreaks of the variant at home.

Shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds telling LBC yesterday: 'As Labour has warned for months, failing to introduce strong protections at the border has left us exposed to mutations of the virus, which has now lead to dangerous outbreaks in the UK.

'It is not good enough to try and shut the door after the horse has bolted, by adding countries onto a red list when it is too late. What's needed is an urgent comprehensive hotel quarantine system.'

Meanwhile Labour chairwoman, Yvette Cooper, said the variant had been under investigation for almost three weeks.

She told The Times: 'The India variant has been under investigation for almost three weeks and other neighbouring countries with lower rates of infection were added to the red list ten days ago.'   

Yesterday Matt Hancock told MPs that the government had made the 'difficult' decision to place India in the highest level of restrictions from 4am on Friday. 

Mr Hancock claimed the 'vast majority' of cases in the UK were linked to international travel. He said: 'After studying the data and on a precautionary basis we have made the difficult but vital decision to add India to the red list.'

Figures show there are now more than 200,000 confirmed Covid cases a day in India, which is still a far cry from the infections per capita seen at the peak of the UK's winter crisis.

A health worker collects a swab from a policeman in Bhopal, the capital city of India's Madhya Pradesh state

A health worker collects a swab from a policeman in Bhopal, the capital city of India's Madhya Pradesh state

Revealed: The countries on the UK's red list 

  • Angola
  • Argentina
  • Bangladesh
  • Bolivia
  • Botswana
  • Brazil
  • Burundi
  • Cape Verde
  • Chile
  • Colombia
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Ecuador
  • Eswatini
  • Ethiopia
  • French Guiana
  • Guyana 
  • India 
  • Kenya
  • Lesotho
  • Malawi
  • Mozambique
  • Namibia
  • Oman
  • Pakistan
  • Panama
  • Paraguay
  • Peru
  • Philippines
  • Qatar
  • Rwanda
  • Seychelles
  • Somalia
  • South Africa
  • Suriname
  • Tanzania
  • United Arab Emirates (UAE)
  • Uruguay
  • Venezuela
  • Zambia
  • Zimbabwe

 

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India is recording fewer than 200 daily cases per million people at the moment compared to the 800-plus per million in Britain in January.

PHE's Professor Peacock suggested this may point to the Indian strain being less infectious than the Kent one which fuelled the UK's crisis. 

Yesterday, a joint statement from the British and Indian government said Boris Johnson's trip - already scaled back - will not go ahead next week 'in light of the current situation'. 

Mr Hancock said the latest move means 'anyone who is not a UK or Irish resident or a British citizen cannot enter the UK if they've been in India in the previous 10 days'. 

'UK and Irish residents and British citizens who have been in India in the past 10 days before their arrival will need to complete hotel quarantine for 10 days from the time of arrival.'

He added: 'India is a country I know well and love. Between our two countries we have ties of friendship and family. I understand the impact of this decision but I hope the House will concur that we must act.'

The news comes after an expert warned the Indian coronavirus variant could 'pose a threat' to Mr Johnson's roadmap out of lockdown. 

Professor Danny Altmann, an Imperial College London immunologist, said there were vaccinated vulnerable Britons who could 'still be caught out by variants like this'. 

PHE currently lists it as a 'variant under investigation', a tier below other troublesome strains including the Kent, South African and Brazilian variants.

But Professor Altmann said he expects, 'from everything I've seen is that it will become a variant of concern.'

SAGE member Professor Andrew Hayward backed calls for India to be put on the 'red list' to buy experts time to study the variant in more detail.

The infectious disease expert urged the Government to 'err on the side of caution and act sooner rather than later'.

But top experts studying Britain's Covid variants said the Indian variant was unlikely to ever take off in the UK because its mutations were 'not top tier'.= 

Dr Jeffrey Barrett, director of the Covid-19 Genomics Initiative at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme on Monday: 'This variant has a couple of mutations that are among those that we think are important that should be watched carefully.

'But they're actually probably not at the very kind of top tier of mutations, for example in the B.1.1.7 – or Kent variant – or the South African variant, that generate the most concern.' 

Dr Barnett said the rise of the Indian variant had happened at the same time India suffered a third wave, which may explain its higher prevalence. 

 

India's health system is collapsing as Covid-19 spreads faster than ever, gravediggers burn piles of victims to keep up and crematorium furnaces MELT due to round-the-clock use

India's health system is collapsing under the fastest spreading coronavirus surge since the pandemic started.

Another 259,170 cases were recorded on Tuesday, the world's highest daily rate, and 1,761 deaths, the country's highest ever daily toll, after a new variant of Covid emerged which scientists fear could partly evade vaccines. 

The British government added the country to its 'red list' on Monday but was accused of acting weeks too late as more than 100 people in the UK have now tested positive for this Indian variant since the end of March, while some 900 people have been arriving on flights from India every day. 

Delhi imposed a week-long lockdown last night as ambulances catapulted from one hospital to another, trying to find an empty bed.

The city of 29 million people has fewer than 100 beds with ventilators, and fewer than 150 beds available for patients needing critical care.

In the western state of Gujarat, many crematoria in Surat, Rajkot, Jamnagar and Ahmedabad are operating around the clock with three to four times more bodies than normal.

The chimney of one electric furnace in Ahmedabad cracked and collapsed after being in constant use for up to 20 hours every day for the past two weeks.

The iron frames inside another in the industrial diamond hub of Surat melted because there was no time to let the furnaces cool.

Burning pyres of patients who died of Covid-19 at a crematorium in Delhi over the weekend. The city of 29 million people has fewer than 100 beds with ventilators, and fewer than 150 beds available for patients needing critical care.

Burning pyres of patients who died of Covid-19 at a crematorium in Delhi over the weekend. The city of 29 million people has fewer than 100 beds with ventilators, and fewer than 150 beds available for patients needing critical care.

Relatives wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) walk amid burning funeral pyres as they perform last rites for covid-19 victims in Bhopal

Relatives wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) walk amid burning funeral pyres as they perform last rites for covid-19 victims in Bhopal

More than 200,000 cases per day were recorded on average in the last week, 20 times as many as two months ago, as a new variant of Covid-19 emerged which scientists fear could partly evade vaccines

More than 200,000 cases per day were recorded on average in the last week, 20 times as many as two months ago, as a new variant of Covid-19 emerged which scientists fear could partly evade vaccines 

An average of 1,247 deaths were recorded over the last seven days, though India's figures on Covid fatalities are believed to be vastly under-reported

An average of 1,247 deaths were recorded over the last seven days, though India's figures on Covid fatalities are believed to be vastly under-reported

Journalist who caught Covid dies while live-tweeting his wait for a hospital bed 

A journalist who caught Covid has died while live-tweeting about his wait for a hospital bed. 

Freelance Vinay Srivastava, 65, on Friday evening announced to the world he was suffering from coronavirus and had low blood oxygen levels.

'Nobody at the hospital lab, or the doctor is picking the phone,' Mr Srivastava tweeted.

'Help will come to you very soon,' tweeted one follower.

Mr Srivastava replied: 'For how long should I keep the faith? Now my oxygen level is 50, and the guard at the Balrampur hospital is not letting me enter.' 

An oxygen saturation level below 94 is considered a cause for medical concern.

Mr Srivastava was even contacted on Twitter by the state's health chief who asked him for more details.

But on Saturday afternoon this was his last tweet: 'My oxygen is 31 when some will help me (sic).' 

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'Until last month we were cremating 20-odd bodies per day... But since the beginning of April we have been handling over 80 bodies every day,' said a local official at the Ramnath Ghela Crematorium in the city. 

With waiting times of up to eight hours, Rajkot has set up a dedicated 24/7 control room to manage the flow in the city's four crematoria.

At two crematoria in Lucknow in the north, relatives are being given numbered tokens and made to wait for up to 12 hours. One has started burning bodies in an adjacent park.

Rohit Singh, whose father died from Covid-19, said crematorium officials were charging around 7,000 rupees (£67) - almost 20 times the normal rate.

Some crematoria in Lucknow ran out of wood and asked people to bring it themselves. Viral photos on social media showed electric rickshaws laden down with logs.

The rising death toll has also increased the grim workload for gravediggers dramatically in the last few weeks. 

When AFP visited the Jadid Qabristan Ahle cemetery in the Indian capital - which is now in a week-long lockdown - on Friday, 11 bodies arrived within three hours.

By sunset, 20 bodies were in the ground. This compares to some days in December and January, when his earthmoving machine stayed idle and when many thought the pandemic was over. 

'Now, it looks like the virus has legs,' said Shamim, 38, a gravedigger like his father and grandfather. 'At this rate, I will run out of space in three or four days.'

Around the graveyard, white body bags or coffins made out of cheap wood are carried around by people in blue or yellow protective suits and lowered into graves.

Just months after India thought it had seen the worst of the pandemic, the virus is now spreading at a rate faster than at any other time, said Bhramar Mukherjee, a biostatistician at the University of Michigan who has been tracking infections in India.

As it battles the rising cases, India announced Monday that it would vaccinate everyone older than 18 from May 1.

The country began inoculating health workers in mid-January and later extended the drive to people over 45. India has so far administered 120 million doses to its population of nearly 1.4 billion.

The country reported over 270,000 infections on Monday, its highest daily rise since the pandemic started.

It has now recorded more than 15 million infections and more than 178,000 deaths. Experts agree that even these figures are likely under-reported.

Amid the rise in cases, Boris Johnson called off a trip to Delhi to hold post-Brexit trade talks with Narendra Modhi.

Burning pyres of patients who died of coronavirus at a crematorium in New Delhi

Burning pyres of patients who died of coronavirus at a crematorium in New Delhi

A woman is consoled after her husband died due to Covid outside a mortuary of a COVID-19 hospital in Ahmedabad

A woman is consoled after her husband died due to Covid outside a mortuary of a COVID-19 hospital in Ahmedabad

A man wearing PPE waits to transfer the body of his relative who died of the Covid-19 coronavirus infection from an ambulance amid burning pyres of other covid deaths at a crematorium in Delhi on April 17

A man wearing PPE waits to transfer the body of his relative who died of the Covid-19 coronavirus infection from an ambulance amid burning pyres of other covid deaths at a crematorium in Delhi on April 17

A woman mourns with her son after her husband died due to the coronavirus disease outside a mortuary of a COVID-19 hospital in Ahmedabad

A woman mourns with her son after her husband died due to the coronavirus disease outside a mortuary of a COVID-19 hospital in Ahmedabad

A man in full PPE prepares to perform the last rites of his relative near multiple burning pyres of patients who died of the Covid-19 in Delhi

A man in full PPE prepares to perform the last rites of his relative near multiple burning pyres of patients who died of the Covid-19 in Delhi

As well as Delhi, the country's healthcare infrastructure is being tested across the land, including in the remote Himalayan region.

In Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir, the weekly average of Covid 19 cases has increased 11-fold in the past month.

In Telengana state in southern India, home to Hyderabad city where most of India's vaccine makers are based, the weekly average of infections has increased 16-fold in the past month.

Meanwhile, election campaigns are continuing in West Bengal state in eastern India, amid an alarming increase there as well, and experts fear that crowded rallies could fuel the spread of the virus.

Top leaders of the ruling Bhartiya Janta Party, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, have campaigned heavily to win polls in the region.

By contrast, in Delhi, officials have begun to impose stringent measures again.

The Indian capital was shut down over the weekend, but now authorities are extending that for a week: all shops and factories will close, except for those that provide essential services, like grocery stores. People are not supposed to leave their homes, except for a handful of reasons, like seeking medical care.

Health workers attend to a suspected covid-19 positive patient waits outside dedicated Covid-19 Health Centre in Mumbai

Health workers attend to a suspected covid-19 positive patient waits outside dedicated Covid-19 Health Centre in Mumbai

They will be allowed to travel to airports or train stations - a difference from the last lockdown when thousands of migrant workers were forced to walk to their home villages.

That harsh lockdown last year, which lasted months, left deep scars. Politicians have since been reticent to even mention the word. When similar measures were imposed in Mahrashtra state, home to the financial capital of Mumbai, in recent days, officials refused to call it a lockdown. Those restrictions are to last 15 days.

Kejriwal, the Delhi official, urged calm, especially among migrant workers who particularly suffered during the previous shutdown, saying this one would be 'small.'

But many feared it would spell economic ruin. Amrit Tripathi, a laborer in New Delhi, was among the thousands who walked home in last year's lockdown.'We will starve,' he said, if the current measures are extended. 

 

There will be no third wave of deaths - and I should know, writes PROFESSOR PHILIP THOMAS, the academic who has accurately predicted every stage of the pandemic so far

A welcome sense of normality is at last beginning to return to Britain. As shops and bars re-open and families reunite, the long ordeal of lockdown appears to be coming to an end.

Given the current positive trends, the Government's target of full freedom by June 21 looks like it should be met.

But that is not the message conveyed by a number of pessimistic experts. Full of bleak foreboding, they warn that the lifting of Covid restrictions could plunge us into another health crisis.

Last week, Professor Jeremy Brown, a member of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), told the BBC that 'a big third wave could still end up with 30,000 to 50,000 deaths, potentially, if it was a similar sort of size to the previous waves.'

Gloom

The model called the Predictor Corrector Coronavirus Filter (PCCF) looks at what will happen if the R-rate is held at 0.6

The model called the Predictor Corrector Coronavirus Filter (PCCF) looks at what will happen if the R-rate is held at 0.6

Professor Philip Thomas (pictured) believes negativity is overdone

Professor Philip Thomas (pictured) believes negativity is overdone

In the same vein, at the beginning of the month, the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) — whose modelling has provided the basis for the tough lockdown policy — warned that Britain is 'highly likely' to suffer a third wave, while any attempt to return to life as it was in February 2020 would probably result in 'a big epidemic'.

This gloom has been compounded by fears about the advent of more infectious variants of the virus, such as the new B.1.617 type from India, whose spread across the subcontinent has just forced the Prime Minister to cancel his forthcoming visit there.

But as a scientist specialising in risk management, I believe this negativity is overdone. There is little convincing evidence to back the claim that, as lockdown is eased, Britain is about to be hit by a third wave, accompanied by a renewed surge in deaths.

On the contrary, it is my view that if there is indeed an increase in infections over the coming months, it will have little significant impact and the death toll will remain extremely low. That is because of the huge success of the vaccine programme, which will mean that by June, the overwhelming majority of the population is protected.

The reality is we are beating the pandemic. As we move into the summer, immunity will grow. In such circumstances, there would be no justification for keeping restrictive measures in place.

This optimism is based partly on the mathematical model I have created, which uses data to project the trajectory of the virus. This is tested against independent measurements made by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

My work on modelling has proved accurate in the past, notably in the 1990s when there was deep concern in government circles about the incidence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) — known as Mad Cow Disease — and its human equivalent, the brain disorder Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD).

Based on my analysis of the data, my contention made in 1996 was that CJD would claim 20 to 520 lives, with a central estimate of 130. That turned out to be remarkably close to the real figure of 180.

Advocate

In contrast, the official advisory team, led by Professor Sir Roy Anderson of Imperial College London, set out scenarios where the death toll ranged from 100 to 10 million.

Intriguingly, one member of Professor Anderson's team was Professor Neil Ferguson, who has gained a high public profile during the Covid crisis as one of the most voluble advocates of lockdown.

In studying the coronavirus, I developed a model called the Predictor Corrector Coronavirus Filter (PCCF). It is a simple software device, inspired by the work of two pioneering Scots: the mathematical epidemiologist Anderson McKendrick and the biochemist William Kermack, who came up with a hypothesis that could track the spread of an infectious disease.

Like all models, the PCCF had a number of assumptions fed into it, including high levels of both the take-up and effectiveness of the vaccines, based on field data.

What the PCCF model indicates is that there is little danger of our society being overwhelmed by a third wave.

My prediction is that, although the total number of active infections in England could reach a peak of 160,000 in the early autumn of this year, this rise will not lead to a spike in deaths or hospitalisations.

That is because, thanks to the vaccines, the link between Covid infections and fatalities has been broken.

In this new, safer environment, roughly one third of people who are infected will have no symptoms at all, while the vast majority of the remainder will have only mild symptoms. As a result, even when the peak is reached, the death toll will probably be less than 20 per day.

I can have full confidence in this forecast because my PCCF model has proved reassuringly accurate over recent months. Its figures are updated daily online and, each week, they turn out to be retrospectively validated by the latest Covid report from the ONS, which surveys the population through the use of Covid tests on 150,000 participants every fortnight.

Every time, my own data and that of the ONS are reconciled almost exactly, which can hardly be said of all the predictions from Sage.

What the most recent findings prove for certain is the efficacy of the vaccines. That is why we are winning the war on Covid. Even the new variants are a far less deadly threat because the jabs have 'drawn their sting', to use the phrase of the epidemiologist Professor Andrew Hayward.

Before the programme started, there were concerns about hesitancy in the public to have the jab, but they have proved unfounded. According to the ONS, 65 per cent of England's adult population have received at least one dose, while that figure rises to 97 per cent for the over-50s.

Moreover, they have proved even more effective than expected. My PCCF model has turned out to be justified in its assumptions that a first jab provides 69 per cent protection against infection and transmission, as well as reducing the chances of dying by 85 per cent after eight weeks.

What the most recent findings prove for certain is the efficacy of the vaccines. Pictured, Prime Minister Boris Johnson at a pub in Wolverhampton on Monday

What the most recent findings prove for certain is the efficacy of the vaccines. Pictured, Prime Minister Boris Johnson at a pub in Wolverhampton on Monday

Threat

So why are some other experts so pessimistic? I think it is because they are fixated by the goal of eradicating Covid, no matter what the social and economic cost, so they view any measure of freedom as a potential threat.

But this approach lacks any sense of perspective. It fails to take into account the huge collateral damage done by the lockdowns, including poor mental and physical health, financial insecurity, business failures and unemployment.

It has been cruel to the older people locked in care homes and to students trapped on university campuses. One clear indicator of a society's prosperity is life expectancy. Thanks to the fall-out from lockdown, our average length of life in Britain may already be reducing, which means that people of all ages will die earlier than they should.

We have stored up colossal problems for the future. The last vestiges of lockdown should not continue a moment longer that was planned in the Government's roadmap. And my model shows that they will not need to. That is a cause for celebration, not anxiety.

  • Philip Thomas is professor of risk management at Bristol University. 

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