DEADLY SURGE

Fears Europe’s Covid third wave could spread to the UK within weeks after AstraZeneca vaccine fiasco

A DEADLY third Covid wave sweeping Europe - fuelled by the AstraZeneca vaccine fiasco - could cause a new surge in the UK within weeks, government scientists fear.

The EU's shambolic jab rollout, combined with a sharp rise in infections, has seen large swathes of the continent plunged back into lockdown in the past week.

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Paris has been plunged back into lockdown following a rise in casesCredit: Alamy

Europe’s rise in cases comes as countries continue to struggle with the vaccine rollout, which has been hampered by political infighting, supply problems and growing skepticism over the AstraZeneca jab

According to , scientific advisers are becoming increasingly concerned that Europe’s third wave could cause a rise in cases in the UK within weeks. 

The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) has urged the Government to take a cautious approach amid the surge in infections on the continent - but has not called for a change to Boris Johnson’s roadmap out of lockdown. 

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Britain saw a huge rise in cases in late December amid the spread of the Kent variant, which now makes up a significant number of infections in Europe.     

A government source told The Times that the rise in Europe was being watched closely, adding: “It’s a fact that when waves one and two hit Europe they hit us afterwards.”

Professor of infectious disease epidemiology Andrew Hayward has warned the UK needs to be "careful" as it releases lockdown measures as the rise in infections across Europe could last "several months".

Europe's medicines regulator EMA has cleared the AstraZeneca jab for use
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Experts have warned the lockdown in the UK is "necessary"Credit: Getty

He told Times Radio that it was "very worrying" for Europe to be moving into a "third wave" of coronavirus cases with "comparatively low vaccination levels";.

Speaking to the station in a personal capacity, Professor Hayward added: "From what I understand, quite a lot of that is the emergence of the strain that came from the UK, the B117 strain, which is more transmissible, which is the same strain that's still here now.

"I think it just shows that the lockdown in the UK is necessary and we need to be careful as we release and to watch the figures because this shows the potential for cases to shoot up.

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"Obviously it has implications on travel, I think, and what we plan for doing with that, because these waves of infection will tend to last for several months really before they get back down to low levels.

"But unless there's much travel between the countries it shouldn't directly impact us."

EXPERT'S WARNING

Paris has entered a month-long lockdown after the country recorded almost 35,000 cases in a 24-hour period.

Scientists estimate that 5 to 10 per cent of these cases could be the South African variant.

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Meanwhile, large swathes of Italy were plunged back into lockdown this week after cases nearly doubled in a month, with all schools and non-essential retail forced to shut. 

Quarantine-free holidays abroad in May are in doubt as Europe faces a Covid surgeCredit: Getty

German chancellor Angela Merkel is also mulling whether to delay a planned reopening of the economy as infections and hospitalisations creep up. 

Lothar Wieler, head of the Robert Koch Institute for Infectious Diseases, yesterday said the country was “at the beginning of the third wave” as the country recorded 17, 860 infections - its highest daily caseload in a month.

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