Beach-goers are forced to cram together as air ambulances land at Dorset beach to rescue four thrill-seekers who hurt themselves jumping off 200ft cliffs(50 Pics)
Beach-goers were crammed together to make room for air ambulances to land at Durdle Door in Dorset yesterday after four people injured themselves jumping off cliffs into the sea.
The four unidentified jumpers vaulted from the top of the ancient limestone arch, which reaches 200ft at its highest point, and are in critical condition, according to Dorset Police.
Images from the scene show a mass of sun-seekers crammed into one area, near the only available exit, as they try to vacate the area as the air ambulance lands.
Despite initially claiming that only three people were hurt jumping off the famous archway, it emerged last night that the figure is one higher.
Handout photo issued by Dorset Police of air ambulances landed at Durdle Door yesterday after three people were seriously injured jumping off cliffs into the sea
The sun-seekers were crammed into one area yesterday in order to vacate the Dorset beach through the one accessible exit
Pictured: A man jumps from the 200ft ancient limestone arch yesterday at Durdle Door, Dorset
A tombstoner can be seen plummeting towards the sea after vaulting from the top of the ancient limestone arch known as Durdle Door in Dorset
A file photo shows an air ambulance landing on the beach at Durdle Door yesterday afternoon after four people injured themselves tombstoning off of the ancient limestone archway
Piers Morgan called the scenes at Durdle Door 'Total insanity' while other social media users criticised the government's early relaxation of lockdown, calling it a 'sham'
People packed the beach from side to side despite police chiefs earlier threatening to impose fines on those meeting in groups of more than two and flouting social distancing rules before the planned easing date on Monday.
HM Coastguard and the RNLI are helping to clear the area after police were called at around 3.45pm.
Chief Inspector Claire Phillips, of Dorset Police, said: 'We have had to close the beach at Durdle Door to allow air ambulances to land. As a result, we are evacuating the beach and the surrounding cliff area.
'I am urging people to leave the area to enable emergency services to treat the injured people.'
Piers Morgan called the scenes at Durdle Door 'Total insanity' while other social media users criticised the government's early relaxation of lockdown, calling it a 'sham'.
Another Twitter user wrote: 'People are absolute morons. Some of these people will be sending their kids to school on Monday to be taught by my loved ones (or by me in 2 weeks). I am livid! This is what happens when you ease lockdown early.'
A tombstoner can be seen plummeting towards the sea after vaulting from the top of the ancient limestone arch known as Durdle Door in Dorset
Until the helicopter landed yesterday, people were largely seen complying with social distancing guidelines at Durdle Door, Dorset
Visitors and sunbathers flocked to Durdle Door at Lulworth in Dorset yesterday
A file photo shows a wider shot of Durdle Door in Dorset, where four people injured themselves after jumping off the ancient archway yesterday
The injuries at Durdle Door came shortly after England's deputy chief medical officer pleaded with Britons 'not to tear the pants out of' the loosened lockdown when more freedoms are granted on Monday.
Professor Jonathan Van-Tam warned that abusing new liberties would fuel the spread of infection and said that the lifting of curbs should be treated as if gently lifting the lid on a coiled spring - 'painstakingly' slow.
The top scientific adviser said the country was at a 'very dangerous moment' in the crisis and gave his colourful instruction to the public as thousands of sun-seekers packed on to beaches to bask in scorching weather.
It comes as official mobility data shows the number of people venturing out to parks has increased far above pre-lockdown levels as people look to socialise in outdoor spaces.
Speaking beside Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden at the daily Downing Street briefing, he reminded people of how rapidly the disease can spread throughout the population.
Britons have been urged 'not to tear the pants out of' the loosened lockdown when more freedoms are granted on Monday by England's deputy chief medical officer amid fears too quick an easing would rapidly increase the spread of infection
Professor Jonathan Van-Tam warned that abusing new liberties would fuel the spread of infection and said that the lifting of curbs should be treated as if gently lifting the lid on a coiled spring - 'painstakingly' slow. Pictured: Bournemouth beach
People enjoy the sunshine on the beach at Southend-On-Sea in Essex as temperatures soared to 82F in the UK
Ahead of next week's easing of restrictions, Prof Van-Tam said: 'This is a dual responsibility here of government to go slowly and carefully and to take the advice from the scientists, of the scientists to watch this whole thing very closely over the next few weeks and of the public in general to actually follow the guidance.
'Don't tear the pants out of it and don't go further than the guidance actually says.'
It came after restless Britons yesterday brushed aside warnings from police and scientists and were tempted outdoors by baking temperatures, which climbed to highs of 82F (28C).
Huge crowds descended on the remote beaches including Durdle Door at Lulworth in Dorset yesterday as official mobility data showed a large increase in the number of people travelling to parks
Busy traffic heads westward along the M3 near Eastleigh, Hampshire, near the coast as hordes of beach-goers headed to popular seaside destinations at the start of a warm and sunny weekend
A police officer patrols the beach at Southend-on-Sea, Essex, after forces across the nation said they faced an uphill struggle to enforce
The current lockdown allows the public to travel to beauty spots to sunbathe with members of their household, or to meet one person from another household at a two-metre distance (Lido in Ruislip pictured)
Scenes at bustling seaside hotspots, especially along the south coast (Brighton pictured), showed large groups sprawling on the sand and pitching up tents from early this morning
England's deputy chief medical officer Professor Jonathan Van Tam (left) gave his colourful instruction as sun-seekers jumped the gun on Monday's easing of restrictions and crowded on to the nation's beaches. Right: Oliver Dowden, Culture Secretary, also speaks at the briefing
From Monday, groups of up to six people will be allowed to meet both in public spaces and in private gardens, where they can even enjoy barbecues.
But Boris Johnson's preemptive announcement of the loosening last Thursday has already spurred a wave of revelry across the country.
Police chiefs have warned their officers face an uphill struggle to enforce the existing rules this weekend, but have attempted to stamp out mass flouting by threatening to impose fines.
The current lockdown allows the public to travel to beauty spots to sunbathe with members of their household, or to meet one person from another household at a two-metre distance.
Yet scenes at bustling seaside hotspots, especially along the south coast, showed large groups sprawling on the sand and pitching up tents from early this morning.
This evening, following alarming pictures of crammed beaches and parks, the government begged Britons not to take a mile when it gives an inch more freedom.
Prof Van-Tam told the press conference that the lockdown easing must go 'painstakingly' slowly, adding: 'The scientists will continue to give that advice to the Government. No apologies for that, we will absolutely continue to do that.'
Referring back to when levels of the virus were higher, he said at that point he had noted it was a very dangerous moment.
He added: 'I believe this is also a very dangerous moment. We have to get this right.'
Compliance with the curbs frayed further on the 68th day of lockdown as three of the nation's top scientists - all on the government's Sage panel of experts steering the crisis response - voiced concerns that restrictions were being lifted 'too early'.
Prof Peter Horby this morning lined up behind Sir Jeremy Farrar and Prof John Edmunds to break ranks and caution that measures were being relaxed when the infection rate was still not low enough.
The 'R' reproduction rate sits just below one between 0.7 and 0.9, and the government announced there were 215 new Covid-19 deaths yesterday, following a pattern of decline.
Ministers are trying to juggle both keeping the R number below 1 - to extinguish the spread of infection - and fire up the economy and return to normal life.
Surges in travel have been recorded as the lockdown is tentatively eased, and traffic was pictured on busy motorways surrounding coastal towns - backed up by TomTom congestion data which plotted upticks from last week.
Seaside car parks were also rammed as beach-goers grabbed their towels and headed on to the sand.
A family wearing plastic visors to protect themselves from coronavirus had a picnic on the beach at Ruislip Lido in west London
People enjoying the good weather on the beach at Durdle Door, near Lulworth, Dorset, as the public were urged to keep up social distancing measures
Boscombe Beach in Bournemouth was hugely popular with visitors and locals this weekend. On Monday, lockdown measures will be eased further
Apple's mobility tracker shows a surge in the amount of travel across the UK since May as lockdown restrictions begin to be eased
The four Home Nations now have significantly different sets of lockdown rules in place. For example, in England from Monday six people can meet up outdoors but in Scotland from yesterday it is eight people
Bars lining the beaches served takeaway drinks to thirsty Britons after being shuttered for most of lockdown.
Supermarkets reported last night that shoppers were already spending record sums on sausages, beer, wine and ice cream in anticipation of weekend barbecues and picnics.
Scorching temperatures hit highs of 81.5F (27.5C) in Kinlochewe in the Scottish Highlands, which basked in warmer weather than Morocco.
London's Heathrow recorded highs of 78F (25.7) and Bude in Cornwall saw the mercury climb to 77 (25.3).
Police chiefs were braced for mass flouting yesterday and warned their officers faced an impossible situation of trying to force the public to comply with existing rules while knowing many of these curbs are set to be dropped on Monday.
Dorset yesterday saw thousands flock to its sun-kissed beaches, with Bournemouth and Durdle Door overrun with people.
Chief Constable James Vaughan said yesterday: 'Despite the ongoing lockdown measures, we are experiencing a high volume of visitors to Dorset and this is in part due to the beautiful weather we are experiencing.
'However, what is apparent is that in some locations social distancing cannot be adhered to because of the sheer number of people there. The message from Dorset Police and our partner agencies is that if an area looks too busy, please go home or elsewhere.
'The Prime Minister has announced further relaxation of the rules from Monday 1 June and this will see more people meeting up outside and in private gardens.
'This will be welcome news to many families and friends, but please be mindful that we all need to stay alert and play our part to prevent more people from becoming infected or dying from this terrible virus.'
Other police chiefs took aim at the PM for casting officers into the lurch by announcing the easing of lockdown early.
Northumbria's Labour Police and Crime Commissioner Kim McGuinness said: 'The PM must have known he was going to create a situation that is difficult to police. The messaging looks like it was rushed forward to help ministers in a difficult position.'
Anthony Stansfeld, the Conservative Police and Crime Commissioner for Thames Valley, said: 'People should obey the rules – things are only just beginning to open up, so please don't pre-empt them.
'All the relaxation of lockdown is being carefully timed by the Government's chief scientists for good reason.
'It's far better if people wait and do things at the proper time, so please don't jump the gun. A bit more freedom is coming on Monday, so I urge everyone to be patient.'
Merseyside Police warned that people would be fined if they turned up to parks and beaches in large groups across the city this weekend.
Superintendent Jonathan Davies said: 'I know people will be tempted to get outside. This is a reminder that the rules on spending time with only one other person from another household remains in place this weekend.'
There are also warnings from forces in UK holiday destinations, as it was revealed that 38 per cent of lockdown breach fines handed out on last bank holiday weekend were for overnight stays, including people using camper fans and second homes.
The message from police to stick to the current rules was bolstered by the interventions from the Sage scientists, who were squeamish about the lockdown being lifted too fast.
Prof Horby, chairman of the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (NERVTAG) and a Sage member, said Britain could not afford to lose control of the virus.
He told BBC Radio 4 this morning: 'We really can't go back to a situation where we've got the numbers of cases and deaths we've had in the past.'
Labour's shadow health minister Justin Madders said: 'It is crucial for all of us that the Government gets this right.
'Easing lockdown must be done as safely as possible. It will only work if there are effective, flexible and local systems in place that have the confidence of the public to ensure that we avoid a second peak of infections.'
London Mayor Sadiq Khan also waded in and said he was 'deeply concerned we are now rushing too fast to lift lockdown measures'.
Sir Jeremy, director of the Wellcome Trust and Sage member said in a Twitter post that he 'agreed with John' on the clear science advice, appearing to reference Sage colleague Professor John Edmunds, who said on Friday the Government was 'taking risks' by relaxing measures from Monday.
Sir Jeremy also said the newly-introduced NHS test and trace system needed to be 'fully working' before measures were eased.
He wrote: 'Covid-19 spreading too fast to lift lockdown in England. Agree with John & clear science advice.
'TTI (test, trace and isolate) has to be in place, fully working, capable dealing any surge immediately, locally responsive, rapid results & infection rates have to be lower. And trusted.'
A whistleblower told the Daily Mail that the government's track and trace system, designed to keep the UK out of lockdown, is in chaos - chaotically recruited, ill-prepared and, in many cases, left idle for days at a time .
'There's absolutely no chance it's ready,' the 38-year-old whistleblower from Manchester said. 'If it does happen [this week]… there will be catastrophic and continued failings from that day onwards.
'This is serious – it's a pandemic, and lives are at risk. I'm genuinely worried about how we are about to be set loose on the public'.
Prof Horby also expressed serious doubts about the contact-tracing system, which has been heralded as the ticket out of blanker lockdown. He said: 'As we know, it's not yet fully operational so that is where the risk lies.'
Professor John Edmunds said many experts would 'prefer' to see the number of Covid-19 infections drop before measures such as a relaxation on social interaction restrictions were introduced.
Latest data from the Office for National Statistics suggests there are an estimated 54,000 new coronavirus infections a week in England outside of hospital and care settings, equating to nearly 8,000 per day.
The so-called R value, or reproduction rate, is currently between 0.7 and 0.9, and must remain under one to avoid a rise in infections - a key test on whether lockdown measures should be eased, with the Government stressing the need to avoid a second wave of cases which would threaten to overwhelm the NHS.
Sunbathers enjoy the warm weather on the beach near Boscombe Pier in Bournemouth. Britons were urged to follow social distancing guidelines this weekend
Bars lining the beaches served takeaway drinks to thirsty Britons after being shuttered for most of lockdown (Bournemouth pictured)
Sun-seekers head down a path leading to the beach at Durdle Door near Lulworth, Dorset, as the sun shines on the south coast
Sunbathers sprawl out on the sands at Sandbanks in Dorset this morning as the mercury climbs to 82F
The promenade at Sandbanks was bustling early this morning, with cyclists and runners getting their exercise
Bournemouth: Tom Tom traffic trackers show an uptick in car travel from last week, with road use slowly creeping up over the last seven days
Brighton: An uptick in weekend travel was also recorded in this seaside town as people flooded on to the beaches
London: A small increase in travel was recorded in the capital from last week
Prof Edmunds, speaking during a Science Media Centre briefing, said the decision to relax certain rules came with a degree of risk.
He said: 'I think many of us would prefer to see the incidence driven down to lower levels because that would mean we have fewer cases occurring before we relaxed the measures.
'If we had incidents at a lower level, even if the reproduction level went up a bit, we wouldn't be in a position where we were overwhelming the health service.
'I think at the moment with relatively high incidents, relaxing the measures and with an untested track and trace system, I think we are taking some risk here.
'Even if that risk doesn't play out and we keep the incidents flat, we're keeping it flat at quite a high level. The Government has launched its track and trace system designed to limit the spread of infection by ordering contacts of those who become infected with coronavirus to isolate
Prof Edmunds, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, supported the decision to essentially substitute a 'blanket approach' to containing the virus with a targeted one, adding it saw a return to 'some level of normality'.
He added: 'None of us think, who have looked at this in any great detail, that that will be sufficient to be able to hold the reproduction number below one.
'We all think we will have to have quite significant numbers of wider social distance measures in place.
'The basic reproduction number for this virus is perhaps three, maybe even more, so we cannot relax our guard by very much at all.'
He said there was a need to try and get the economy restarted, to get people back to work and to provide a boost to people's mental health.
But he said even if track and trace kept the R-value at about one, it would still result in around 8,000 community infections a day in England.
The Prime Minister's official spokesman defended the decision to announce the change on Thursday, saying: 'We've said that wherever possible we would give a period of notice in advance of changes being made, ideally 48 hours or more.
'We're enormously grateful for the efforts of the British public in sticking by the rules and getting the infection rate down and that does mean that from June 1 we will be able to allow people to have some more social contact in a safe and socially-distanced way. I'm sure that members of the public will show common sense.'
Speaking in response to the PM's announcement on Thursday that restrictions would be changed on Monday, former Tory minister Tobias Ellwood said last night: 'The nation has been incredibly disciplined to date.
'Is it wise to tell the public that they can have barbecues with friends from Monday before a sunny weekend?'
A Home Office source also warned last night that if people breached the guidance this weekend, they risked putting lives in danger by reversing the progress that had been made in tackling the virus.
There is also the possibility for confusion as while Wales also does not relax its lockdown rules until Monday, Scotland did so from yesterday.
Surfers grab their boards and head along the beach at Sandbanks in Dorset yesterday as the sun shone on the south coast
People enjoy the continued warm weather along and on the banks of the River Thames Seasonal weather, Henley on thames, Oxfordshire
Swimmers brace the waters at Hythe Bay, Dover, Kent yesterday ahead of further lockdown restriction easing on Monday
Paddleboarders take to the river Thames near Maidenhead yesterday as thousands of Britons were tempted outdoors by scorching weather
A group of six people bask under the baking sun on Brighton beach yesterday
Camber Sands car park in East Sussex was rammed yesterday as beach-goers arrived to soak up the sun this Saturday
Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust and Sage member said in a Twitter post that he 'agreed with John' on the clear science advice, appearing to reference Sage colleague Professor John Edmunds, who said on Friday the Government was 'taking risks' by relaxing measures from Monday
A group of beach-goers grab their gear and head along the promenade in Sandbanks, Dorset, yesterday
People relax in a group of five on the banks of the River Thames Seasonal weather, Henley on Thames, Oxfordshire
Beach-goers are forced to cram together as air ambulances land at Dorset beach to rescue four thrill-seekers who hurt themselves jumping off 200ft cliffs(50 Pics)
Reviewed by Your Destination
on
May 31, 2020
Rating:
No comments