Politics

Brits will now be fined up to £6,400 for going to house parties as Priti Patel cracks down with tougher rules


PRITI Patel has tonight announced fresh £800 fines for ANYONE attending illegal house parties – rising up to £6,400 for repeat offenders.

The Home Secretary announced the tough crackdown on ravers holding banned parties during the national lockdown – as police chiefs blasted their selfish behaviour.

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Priti Patel announced new fines at tonight's press conference

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Priti Patel announced new fines at tonight’s press conferenceCredit: AP:Associated Press
Cops will crack down even harder on Brits breaking rules

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Cops will crack down even harder on Brits breaking rulesCredit: London News Pictures

And she refused to rule out further, tougher measures, saying: “It’s too early to even speak about other measures”.

She also said it was too soon to think about when measures would be lifted – or even when Brits may be able to finally book a much-needed holiday.

Launching a fresh crackdown which ministers hope will drive down cases, the Home Secretary said tonight: “Next week we’ll introduce a new £800 fine for those attending house parties, doubling for each repeat offence to a maximum of £6,400.”

It will apply to any gatherings of more than 15 discovered by cops, and will kick in next week.

Brits will be fined £800 for their first offence, rising to £1,600 for their second, £3,200 for their third, up to a maximum of £6,400 if they are caught at four or more house parties.

She went on: “The science is clear – such irresponsible behaviour poses a significant threat to public health.

“Not just to those in attendance but also to police offices who shut them down.”

Police chief Martin Hewitt said those people organising parties were “selfishly putting lies at risk” and police would no longer “waste time trying to reason with them”.

Police chief Martin Hewitt didn't hold back in blasting 'selfish' party-goers

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Police chief Martin Hewitt didn’t hold back in blasting ‘selfish’ party-goersCredit: AP:Associated Press
London's NHS chief, Dr Vin Diwakar, said tonight there were "early signs of hope" that the lockdown is beginning to work

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London’s NHS chief, Dr Vin Diwakar, said tonight there were “early signs of hope” that the lockdown is beginning to workCredit: Getty Images – Getty

He said tonight: “We have repeatedly made it clear that house parties and other large gatherings shouldn’t be happening.

“They’re dangerous, irresponsible and totally unacceptable and I hope that the likelihood of an increased fine acts as a disincentive for those people who are thinking of attending or organising such events.”

It came as:

  • Covid deaths rose by another 1,290 today and 37,892 more new cases reported
  • But Matt Hancock revealed that 5million jabs had been dished out to 4.6million people now as Britain fights back
  • Gavin Williamson said he would give schools two weeks notice for reopening again
  • Boris Johnson warned it was too early to even think about lifting the lockdown – and batted down questions about it lasting until the SUMMER
  • Northern Ireland extended it’s lockdown until the start of March – the longest period across the UK so far
  • Priti Patel blasted people trying to jump the vaccine queue by signing up to fake links as “morally reprehensible”

250 £10,000 fines have been issued since late august to people who have organised large parties, he revealed.

He also told of several parties officers attended recently.

One in Brick Lane, London, 40 people were cramped inside and were hostile to police when they tried to shut it down.

Three officers were injured and one even has to go to hopsital.

Another in Hertforshire saw nearly 150 gathering with music equipment and amplifiers too.

One cop in Bournemouth who attended an anti-lockdown protest had since had to go to hospital for Covid-19 treatment – laying bare the shocking risk frontline officers are dealing with.

London’s NHS chief, Dr Vin Diwakar, said tonight there were “early signs of hope” that the lockdown is beginning to work, but people must continue to obey the rules.

However, he added in a stark warning: “This is the biggest health emergency to face this country since the Second World War. Breaking the rules in the way that’s been described today is like switching on a light in the middle of a blackout in the Blitz.

“It doesn’t just put you at risk in your house. It puts your whole street, the whole of your community at risk.”

The latest crackdown comes after a worrying study last night showed the start of the lockdown has failed to drive down cases like before.

The React study by Imperial College London carried out swab tests on 142,900 volunteers between January 6 and 15 and found one in 63 people now have the virus across England – up 50 per cent on the last report in December.

Boris Johnson warned today that the new coronavirus strain is “much more contagious” when questioned whether the lockdown may not be eased until the summer.

The Prime Minister told reporters: “I think it’s too early to say when we’ll be able to lift some of the restrictions.

“We’ll look then (February 15) at how we’re doing but I think what we’re seeing in the ONS data, in the React survey, we’re seeing the contagiousness of the new variant that we saw arrive just before Christmas – there’s no doubt it does spread very fast indeed.

“It’s not more deadly but it is much more contagious and the numbers are very great.”

He said it is “absolutely crucial” to obey the current restrictions “in what is unquestionably going to be a tough few weeks ahead”.

The concerning new React study shows London was the worst hit area with one in 36 residents of the capital infected with Covid.

Worryingly, it found cases did not drop over the ten day survey – unlike the start of the previous two lockdowns.

Scientists think the new, more contagious mutation may be to blame, and warn infections may not fall unless we do more.

Lead researcher Professor Paul Elliott, from Imperial College London, said: “Our data are showing worrying suggestions of a recent uptick in infections which we will continue to monitor closely.

“Infections must be brought down; if prevalence continues at the high rate we are seeing then hospitals will continue to be put under immense pressure, and more and more lives will be lost.”

However, this morning Gavin Williamson insisted that the pressure on the NHS is being seen.

He told Sky News today: “The evidence that we’ve been seeing is that it’s actually, it has been having an impact in terms of relieving some of that pressure on the NHS.”

Ministers were said to be mulling tougher rules earlier this month – which could include banning people meeting up for exercise, closing nurseries or halting non-essential click and collect services.

It’s unclear whether a new crackdown will be on the cards as the death numbers and case figures still remain stubbornly high.

The new variant – which spreads more easily – is largely to blame.

But ministers also fear the lockdown rules are not being obeyed as strictly as the other shutdowns.

Priti Patel says there is a ‘long way to go’ before national lockdown can be lifted





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