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British Army Helps Clear Backlog of Virus-stranded Drivers

Associated Press

   LONDON - About 1,000 British soldiers were spending Christmas Day
   trying to clear a huge backlog of truck drivers stuck in southeast
   England after France briefly closed its border to Britain, then
   demanded coronavirus tests from all amid fears of a new, apparently
   more contagious, virus variant.
   Even as 4,000 international truck drivers spent yet another day cooped
   up in their cabs, some progress was evident Friday, with traffic around
   the English Channel port of Dover moving in an orderly fashion toward
   the extra ferries that were put on to make the short crossing across to
   Calais in northern France.
   The military personnel were directing traffic and helping a mass
   testing program for the drivers, who must test negative to enter
   France. French firefighters also have been drafted to help the military
   test drivers for coronavirus.
   Officials from Britain's Department for Transport said all but three of
   the 2,367 coronavirus tests conducted so far have been negative.
   France closed its border for 48 hours to Britain last Sunday after
   British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said a variant of the virus that
   is 70% more transmissible is driving the rapid spread of infections in
   London and surrounding areas. As a result, the capital and many other
   parts of England have seen lockdown restrictions tightened and family
   holiday gatherings canceled.
   Most of the testing is being conducted at a disused airfield at Manston
   Airport, 33 kilometers from Dover. Free food and drink was being sent
   to the stranded truck drivers and more than 250 portable toilets were
   put in at Manston, with 32 others placed along the gridlocked M20
   highway.
   "The most reassuring thing is that food is getting through at Manston,
   and I have to say a big thank you to everyone who volunteered to help
   drivers stick it out in cold conditions in the days leading up to
   Christmas," said Duncan Buchanan of Britain's Road Haulage Association.
   The mood among the stranded drivers appeared to be mostly sanguine,
   especially compared to their anger earlier this week at the situation
   and the lack of facilities.
   "I know it's been hard for many drivers cooped up in their cabs at this
   precious time of year, but I assure them that we are doing our utmost
   to get them home," said British Transport Secretary Grant Shapps.
   The virus has been blamed for over 1.7 million confirmed deaths
   worldwide, including nearly 70,000 in Britain, the second-highest death
   toll in Europe behind Italy.
   On Saturday, Britain is extending tighter lockdown restrictions to more
   areas as authorities try to stem the spread of the new variant. Over
   the past two days, Britain has recorded its two highest daily infection
   numbers, at just below 40,000. That is stoking fears that the country's
   beloved National Health Service will face acute capacity issues in its
   hospitals soon and thousands more people will die from the virus.
   In a video message to the nation, Johnson said this Christmas was "not
   about presents, or turkey, or brandy butter" but about hope, in the
   form of coronavirus vaccine shots being delivered and more vaccines
   being developed.
   "We know there will be people alive next Christmas, people we love,
   alive next Christmas precisely because we made the sacrifice and didn't
   celebrate as normal this Christmas," the prime minister said.
   Johnson said Thursday that more than 800,000 people in Britain have
   received the first dose of the vaccine developed by American
   pharmaceutical firm Pfizer and German biotechnology company BioNTech.
   Britain was the first country in the world to approve the vaccine and
   began inoculations for health workers and those over 80 on December 8.