
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
The Welsh First Minister said the country was currently in the third-highest alert level of a possible four, with it being "inevitable" that greater restrictions resembling a
lockdown would be imposed after Christmas if case numbers continued to rise. Level four restrictions are the equivalent of a lockdown, but Mr Drakeford said they would not amount to another
firebreak lockdown as the measures would be reviewed every three weeks, rather than be set for a fixed period of time. And he said there was a possibility of different levels of
restrictions for different parts of Wales, despite previously admitting the series of local lockdowns he imposed across the country during the autumn "didn't work well enough"
to curb the spread of the virus. At Friday's Welsh Government press briefing, Mr Drakeford introduced the system as a "revised plan" of traffic light levels first announced
back in May but have not been mentioned since Wales moved into its "green" phase on August 10. He said: "The revised plan sets out four alert levels. Today in Wales, we are at
alert level 3, the traffic light is red, the level of risk is very high. "If the strengthened measures of last week and the extra action of this week - together with the efforts each
and every one of us need to make - if those measures do not succeed in turning the tide of the virus then it is inevitable that we will have to consider a move to alert level 4 immediately
after Christmas." Mr Drakeford described the Covid-19 situation in Wales as "very serious", and although the country's 17-day firebreak had successfully brought down
rates of new cases these had now risen "faster than our models have predicted", adding that it was "firmly entrenched in so many parts of Wales". The Welsh NHS "will
not be able to cope as it is today" if the current levels of coronavirus-related admissions continue in the coming weeks, he warned. Mr Drakeford said that outdoor attractions across
Wales, such as winter wonderlands, would now be forced to close to limit the spread of Covid-19. An updated coronavirus control plan will be published by the Welsh Government next week to
help people, businesses and public services "plan in these rapidly changing circumstances," he said.