Here are five things you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic this Wednesday evening. We’ll have another update for you on Thursday morning.
1. PM: Second lockdown would be ‘disastrous’ for economy
After a day defending the beleaguered testing system in the House of Commons, Boris Johnson faced more questions from a committee of MPs this evening on the possible impact of a second national lockdown. He told them it would be likely to have “disastrous” financial consequences for the UK and insisted the government was doing “everything in our power” to prevent another one. The prime minister also admitted there was not enough testing capacity. Earlier he blamed a “colossal spike” in demand for ongoing problems with accessing tests and delayed results. Labour, meanwhile, continues to accuse the PM of “incompetence” in his handling of the outbreak.

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2. ‘Don’t go to A&E for a test’
In Bolton, more than 100 people turned up at an A&E asking for Covid-19 tests, prompting the hospital trust to urge people who are not seriously ill to stay away. Bolton has the highest infection rate in England with 196 cases per 100,000 people recorded on Saturday. But people there say they can’t get booked into test centres. Here’s how to get a test.
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Reuters
3. Another Welsh county goes into lockdown
A second county in Wales is to face more restrictions on daily life after cases topped 82 per 100,000 people over the past seven days. First it was Caerphilly. Now, from Thursday evening, the people of Rhondda Cynon Taff, in south Wales, must not leave the area without a reasonable excuse and pubs and restaurants can’t open later than 23:00. Live in the area? These are the new rules.
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Getty Images
4. ‘No evidence’ rail worker was spat on
Railway worker Belly Mujinga died with coronavirus on 5 April. In the days after, it was widely reported that she had been spat at in London’s Victoria station, by a man who claimed he had Covid-19. Now, a report by her employers says there is no evidence of the assault and the man who approached her did not have coronavirus. Govia Thameslink Railway chief executive Patrick Verwer said “Belly’s story continues to move us” and they had learned they should have supported her family better.
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Family handout
5. A particularly slithery face mask
In what may well be a world first, a man has been spotted using a snake as a face covering. A fellow passenger on the Swinton to Manchester bus said she had initially thought the man was wearing a “funky mask” until she saw the snake slither over a hand rail. Transport officials later confirmed live snakes are not acceptable face coverings, so here’s how to make a more suitable one.
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PA Media
And don’t forget…
Find more information, advice and guides on our coronavirus page.
Got concerns about whether your child should still be in school with sniffles and a sore throat? We might be able to give you some guidance.
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