Lockdown restrictions have been imposed on Leicester after a rise in coronavirus cases, including shutting non-essential shops and closing schools to most pupils.

So what does it look like?
All non-essential shops will have to shut while schools will close their doors to most pupils from Thursday.

Schools will stay open for vulnerable youngsters and children of critical workers as they did before and people will be able to travel for childcare.

All but essential travel to, from and within the city is being discouraged, while residents are being told to stay at home unless absolutely necessary.

It is part of what Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called a "whack-a-mole strategy" to crack down on flare-ups, and could be extended to other towns and cities over the next months.

  • What is a local lockdown and how will they work?

Health Secretary Matt Hancock last month said that regional flare-ups of the virus in England would result in "local lockdown".

He told a Downing Street briefing there would be "local lockdowns in the future" with the Joint Biosecurity Centre having a "response function" that could address local spikes in infections, in partnership with local public health agencies.

Mr Hancock has said that under local lockdowns schools, businesses or workplaces could be closed in areas with a high prevalance of infection.

  • When will local lockdowns be introduced?

PHE said there was no threshold for determining when a local lockdown should be implemented.

Advice will be given on a case-by-case basis and decisions taken by leaders based on this advice and the specific circumstances of the area, it added.

  • How will these be implemented?

Mr Hancock gave more detail on how decisions would be taken at a local level when the new measures for Leicester were announced.

He told the House of Commons that "decisions are taken through our Local Action Committee command structure."

Talks are then progressed through a Bronze, Silver and Gold framework.

The Health Secretary added: "If Public Health England or the Joint Biosecurity Centre spots a problem that needs attention or the local director of public health reports a problem through the regional health protection teams, then the outbreak is assessed at the daily Local Action Committee Bronze meeting.

"Issues of concern are raised to the Local Action Committee Silver meeting, which is chaired by the chief medical officer.

"And problems requiring ministerial attention are then raised to the Local Action Committee Gold meeting."

Mr Hancock chaired a Gold meeting about Leicester on Sunday, he told MPs.

  • What powers do councils have already?

Council and public health leaders have said local authorities have the powers needed to tackle outbreaks in schools, businesses or care homes.

But Greg Fell, Association of Directors of Public Health (ADPH) board member, told a committee of MPs earlier this month that they did not have the power to shut down local areas or whole cities.

Any powers to lock down communities would need to be conferred to local leaders, he told the Housing, Communities and Local Government Select Committee.

But he warned that if a city needed to be placed into lockdown "we may well be in national lockdown territory by that time".

  • How do you place a community into lockdown?

Keith Neal, emeritus professor of the epidemiology of infectious diseases at the University of Nottingham, said one of the biggest problems is deciding who is in the lockdown and who is not.

He said that locking down at a regional level could be seen as "unfair" but if Leicester was placed in lockdown then questions remained about how much of the surrounding area should be included.

He added: "One of the biggest problems is deciding who is in the lockdown area and who is not. This needs to be understandable to both the people who are inside and the people on the outside.

"Locking down at the regional level would be seen as unfair or worse as Leicester city has really very little to do with rural Lincolnshire. People do not identify with their regional boundaries and many would not actually know where they are."

  • What is closing down and why?

A spike in infections in Leicester means the city has three times more cases than the city with the next highest total.

To arrest its spread, from Tuesday all non-essential shops will have to shut while schools will close their doors to most pupils from Thursday.

Schools will stay open for vulnerable youngsters and children of critical workers as they did before and people will be able to travel for childcare.

All but essential travel to, from and within the city is being discouraged, while residents are being told to stay at home unless absolutely necessary.

Extra facilities have been set up for walk-in tests and more home testing kits are being made available as anyone with symptoms must come forward for a test, Mr Hancock said.

  • What geographical area is covered?

As well as the city of Leicester, which had a population 329,839 people at the 2011 census, the "surrounding conurbation" will also be affected.

Mr Hancock cited the town of Oadby and the villages of Glenfield and Birstall as examples, adding: "We will be publishing the exact details of which wards are included in these measures imminently."

  • What support is available for the people of Leicester?

Mr Hancock said extra money was being sent to Leicester and Leicestershire councils "to support them to enhance their communications" as well as making support available for people who need to self-isolate.

Through the councils, authorities will also help workplaces with coronavirus clusters to "implement more stringently the Covid-secure guidelines".

Mr Hancock added: "We are providing funding for local support.

"I just want to reiterate to those who are in Leicester right now... that the furlough scheme is in existence and it works now in the same way that it's worked across the country."

Mr Hancock said the Government is "still getting to the bottom of" the reasons why the outbreak in Leicester has occurred.