The final hurrah in Scotland! Drinkers flock to bars in Glasgow and Edinburgh for one last night out before Nicola Sturgeon’s 16-day alcohol ban comes into force at 6pm today
- Scottish First Minister has banned the sale of alcohol inside pubs and restaurants for the next two weeks
- Hospitality sector has branded the move a ‘death sentence’ and said at least a third of venues could shut
- Ms Sturgeon said she had to act after warning cases had started to surge among the older generation
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Drinkers in Scotland partied to closing time last night as they did anything but toast Nicola Sturgeon’s incoming 16-day alcohol ban.
Groups were seen enjoying the chance to have one final pint in Glasgow and Edinburgh before the sweeping restriction comes in at 6pm this evening.
Scotland’s First Minister imposed the two-week alcohol ban inside pubs and restaurants across Scotland and closed bars entirely in coronavirus hotspot areas.
Two women make the most of their last chance to enjoy pubs for the next two weeks in the Scottish city of Edinburgh
For some, the chance to have a final beer before the restrictions, was something to record on their phones for posterity
Pubs and restaurants will have enjoyed a final night of custom ahead of the regulations, branded a ‘death sentence’ by some
It is a move that has been branded a ‘death sentence’ for hundreds of venues and has been slated by frustrated members of the public.
Ms Sturgeon took the unpopular decision after this week warning cases had started to surge among the older generation.
She told MSPs at Holyrood that the situation was ‘better than March’, but admitted she needed to take a ‘backward step’ as she unveiled a dramatic ‘circuit breaker’ squeeze to coincide with the school half-term north of the border.
The lure of one final drink saw huge queues at some venues for people trying to have their last night out before the ban
Five Edinburgh drinkers raise their glasses for a final time before the hospitality sector is hit tonight by the new rukes
Groups walked home after their last drink, bracing themselves for the 16 days of not being able to buy a pint inside a pub
As well as a ban on serving alcohol, hospitality venues will only be allowed to open from 6am to 6pm as Ms Sturgeon said without the crackdown the virus could be ‘out of control by the end of this month’.
But in five ‘hotspot’ areas in Scotland’s central belt, which includes Edinburgh and Glasgow and is home to approximately 70 per cent of the population, pubs will be closed altogether apart from takeaways until October 26 and people will be advised against using public transport.
Hospitality bosses last night described the decision as a ‘total catastrophe’ that will be the ‘final straw,’ for hundreds of venues.
Sector chiefs said Ms Sturgeon had ‘effectively signed a death sentence for many businesses’ and said the ‘real problem’ was socialising at home.
The Scottish Licensed Trade Association told The Telegraph that more than two-thirds of pubs, bars and restaurants ‘could be mothballed or go under’, along with more than half the sector’s jobs.
Meanwhile, Mr Hancock appeared to pave the way for a similar localised crackdown on pubs in England as he said that ‘outside your household and socialising between households, the highest place in incidence of likely transmission, measured by where people have contacts, is unfortunately hospitality’.
Drinkers in Edinburgh share a final sup as they marked the final night before the coronavirus tackling rules were imposed
In Edinburgh people made the most of their last night of freedom before Nicola Sturgeon’s measures were due to hit today
Hordes of drinkers headed home after closing time at 10pm in Glasgow city, ahead of the drinking ban coming in today
Some revellers took selfies of their last night of drinking before the strict regulations came in for parts of Scotland
However, a targeted shutdown of hospitality venues in hotspot areas appears more likely than a nationwide approach, with Downing Street still committed to its strategy of local lockdowns in specific areas where the virus has spiked.
Imposing some of the toughest restrictions in Europe, Ms Sturgeon said that if it was ‘a purely one dimensional decision’ about tackling the disease there would be even harsher action, but she was considering the wider economy and wellbeing.
But it provoked howls of protest from the hospitality industry, who branded the clampdown a ‘total catastrophe’ and warned a swathe of business will go under permanently.
The extraordinary step – which Ms Sturgeon said would be accompanied with £40million of new compensation for stricken firms – came as Scotland reported more than 1,000 new infections in a day.