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Millions more people have entered the highest level of coronavirus restrictions in England and Scotland, as Wales and Northern Ireland also introduced tougher measures from Boxing Day.
Around 43 per cent of England are now in tier 4, including Oxfordshire, Sussex and Suffolk, after six million people were moved up a level on Saturday.
Meanwhile, the whole of mainland Scotland was placed under the toughest level of restrictions in the country, forcing all non-essential retail and hospitality to close.
Tough new restrictions that were eased in Wales for Christmas Day were reimposed on Boxing Day, and a new six-week national lockdown started in Northern Ireland.
The stricter measures face by millions come against the backdrop of a new more contagious variant spreading in the UK.
France has also detected its first case of this mutated version of coronavirus in a man who had travelled to the country from London in the days before Christmas.
Millions wake up on Boxing Day in tier 4
Six million more people are now living under tier 4 areas in England, after changes came into force on Boxing Day.
This means 24 million – or 43 per cent of the country’s population – are now under the toughest level of restrictions, where all non-essential shops and businesses must close, nobody can enter or leave the area and no household mixing is allowed – although one person can meet one other person outside in a public space.
New tier 4 areas include Sussex, Oxfordshire, Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire.
Find out more in Andrew Woodcock’s report after the changes were announced:
Zoe Tidman26 December 2020 09:19
Good morning, and welcome to The Independent’s coverage of the coronavirus pandemic.
Zoe Tidman26 December 2020 09:09
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