A SAGE adviser has said Europe’s Covid-19 lockdown riots are a ‘warning to the UK’ and urged Brits to get their booster jabs.
Professor John Edmund said today that opposition to restrictions on the continent have demonstrated the importance of vaccinations, especially as ‘it is pretty clear immunity does wane’.
Austria has made vaccinations mandatory and yesterday announced it would return to lockdown on Monday, with Germany seemingly poised to follow suit after health officials warned they cannot rule out a full shutdown.
It is the latest reintroduction of restrictions across Europe that have faced a fierce backlash and come as governments seek to increase vaccination rates ahead of the winter amid soaring numbers of infections.
Riots and protests have broken out in cities including Rotterdam where police were forced to fire warning shots at protestors marching against the reintroduction of restrictions.
‘What you see now in central Europe with these rapid increase in cases, you see the importance of vaccination,’ Mr Edmund told Sky.

Pictured: A scooter set on fire during a protest against the 2G policy in Rotterdam, Netherlands
But Mr Edmund said the UK was unlikely to be hit by the Christmas chaos because the UK ‘is in a slightly different position.’
He added: ‘Frankly here in the UK, we’ve had high rates of infection for many months now so we’re in a slightly different position to Austria and Germany and so on.
‘I don’t think things will quite happen in the same way here as they have done there. But it is a warning to us. I think it’s pretty clear that immunity does wane.
‘I’m sure you do still have some protection from the vaccine but it’s nowhere near as strong as shortly after you’ve been vaccinated. It’s very clear the booster doses do give a very clear boost to your immune system.’


Professor John Edmund said the situation in Europe should act as a warning to the UK
Asked whether the Government should re-introduce control measures, Mr Edmund told Sky: ‘The plan B measures, we could’ve implemented them at any point. It’s a government decision whether to take that step.
‘They have to look at the potential effectiveness and measure that against the potential cost of some of those things.’
Last week the WHO warned the continent was now the epicentre of the pandemic and said the surge in infection was ‘alarming’.
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