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Fears Indian Covid variant could ‘scupper’ road map as UK cases dwindle

While Britain’s virus rate continues to fall, there has been a sharp spike in Covid-19 numbers across the globe.

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The Indian coronavirus mutation could “scupper” the UK’s march to freedom, a leading scientist has warned, despite the lockdown and vaccine programme leading to cases falling to a seven-month low.

Covid-19 infections across the UK dropped to the lowest level since the autumn, according to the latest figures.

But a professor of immunology has called for Britain to be on its guard against a third wave after 77 cases of another possible vaccine-busting mutation was recorded domestically.

Public Health England (PHE) reported that 73 cases of the B.1.617 variant, which was first discovered in India, had been found, while a further four cases were identified in Scotland.

But despite the warnings, Downing Street has insisted Boris Johnson’s trip to India later this month – his first major international visit since securing a Brexit trade deal with Brussels – will go ahead.

It comes as the group advising ministers on vaccine deployment recommended that pregnant women should be offered a Covid-19 jab at the same time as the rest of the population.

The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) had previously only recommended that Covid-19 jabs be offered to pregnant women when their risk of exposure to the virus is high, such as health workers, or if a woman has underlying health conditions.

According to the latest estimates from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), around one in 480 people in private households in England had Covid-19 in the week to April 10 –  the lowest figure since the week to September 19 last year.

Infection rates in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland followed a similar trend of depreciating numbers, ONS data showed.

But the decline in infection levels across the UK marked a contrast to rising case rates in other parts of the world.

World Health Organisation (WHO) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said coronavirus rates globally were “worrying”, as India recorded more than 217,000 daily cases on Friday, pushing its total since the pandemic began past 14.2 million.

Prof Altmann said the discovery of the Indian variant in the UK should warrant India being placed on the UK’s “red list”.

Pregnant women should should be offered a Covid-19 jab at the same time as the rest of the population, the JCVI said
Pregnant women should should be offered a Covid-19 jab at the same time as the rest of the population, the JCVI said (Yui Mok/PA)

But Prof Altmann said he suspected the Indian mutation would be escalated to a variant of concern as it holds properties that allow it to evade the coronavirus vaccines currently on offer, like the South African variant, and was more transmissible, in a similar fashion to the Californian version of Covid.

“I think we should be terribly concerned about it,” he told the BBC.

“They (variants of concern) are things that can most scupper our escape plan at the moment and give us a third wave. They are a worry.”

(PA Graphics)
(PA Graphics)

The country is not currently on the Government’s “red list” for travel, which sees people who have been in those countries in the previous 10 days refused entry to the UK.

British or Irish nationals, or people with UK residency rights, are able to return from red list countries but must isolate in a quarantine hotel for 10 days.

No 10 said Mr Johnson’s visit to India “is still happening later this month” but, as already announced this week, would be “slightly shorter” than the initial four-day planned trip, with most of the meetings expected to be shoehorned into a single day.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson still intends to travel to India this month, according to No 10
Prime Minister Boris Johnson still intends to travel to India this month, according to No 10 (Finnbarr Webster/PA)

Meanwhile, the JCVI, which advises ministers on the order of priority for the rollout, said there were “no specific safety concerns” identified with “any brand of Covid-19 vaccines” in relation to pregnancy.

The JCVI said data from the US showed around 90,000 pregnant women had received jabs, mainly the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, “without any safety concerns being raised”.

As a result, the committee said it advised that it was “preferable” for pregnant women in the UK to be offered these two vaccines where available.

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