Northern Ireland

Ministers agree to relax Covid rules at home and in pubs and restaurants

First Minister Paul Givan speaking to the media at Stormont Castle. Picture by Liam McBurney, Press Association
First Minister Paul Givan speaking to the media at Stormont Castle. Picture by Liam McBurney, Press Association First Minister Paul Givan speaking to the media at Stormont Castle. Picture by Liam McBurney, Press Association

STORMONT ministers have agreed further relaxations of Covid-19 regulations at home and in pubs and restaurants.

During a four-hour Executive meeting yesterday, ministers also discussed concerns about the rising number of pupils who are currently off school due to Covid. Sinn Féin has called for the Assembly to be recalled to discuss the situation.

Under the new rules agreed by ministers, which come into effect at 5pm on Friday, the maximum number of people who can meet indoors will increase to 15 people from four households.

In hospitality venues, the requirement for table service will be removed and customers will be permitted to stand while consuming food and drink in outdoor settings.

Customers will also be permitted to take part in activities such as playing pool or darts or using gaming machines.

Dancing will again be allowed at weddings and civil partnership receptions and the requirement to purchase tickets in advance for live performances will be removed, as will the need for audience members to have allocated seats.

First Minister Paul Givan welcomed the latest changes, but said he hoped further relaxations would be announced soon.

"I would have like to have seen progress around social distancing, moving that from regulation into guidance, but that is something that will now form the discussions on Thursday," he said.

Sinn Féin junior minister Declan Kearney said the new measures were "prudent and proportionate".

"Covid-19 is very active within our community, we are not out of the woods yet," he said.

The Executive also discussed concerns over the number of pupils currently absent from school due to Covid, and the resulting pressure it is placing on the testing system.

In one instance, the principal of Larne High School reported that more than half of his pupils have been told to stay at home.

When pupils are off school as a close contact, they have to take a Covid test on day two of their absence. If it is negative they are allowed to return to school but have to take another test on the eighth day after contact.

There have been reports of long queues at some Covid testing centres in Northern Ireland, with some facilities struggling to accommodate the number of students requiring a test to return to school.

Mr Givan said there were concerns that some schools were taking a "blanket approach" to self-isolation.

But Sinn Féin MLA Pat Sheehan said there was a "lack of clear Covid-19 guidance for schools".

"I have initiated a recall petition to ensure that the Education Minister comes to the Assembly and sets out exactly what the Department of Education will do to support schools," he said.

The Executive meeting, which was delayed from last week after deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill contracted Covid, heard that the number of positive cases in Northern Ireland has begun to decline in the last few days, and that hospital admissions are expected to begin to decline.

Meanwhile, nine further deaths of patients who had tested positive for Covid-19 have been reported in Northern Ireland.

The Department of Health said there had also been 1,764 new confirmed cases in the last 24-hour reporting period.

On Monday morning, there were 407 Covid-19 inpatients in hospital, 46 of whom were in intensive care.