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People taking advantage of the winter sunshine in Hackney Wick, east London.
People taking advantage of the winter sunshine in Hackney Wick, east London. Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images
People taking advantage of the winter sunshine in Hackney Wick, east London. Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

Police urge Britons to follow lockdown rules as warm weather pulls crowds

This article is more than 3 years old

Public spaces such as beaches and parks busy as temperatures reach up to 15C in parts of the UK

Warmer temperatures have brought crowds to beauty spots including beaches and parks, amid calls from police not to make unnecessary journeys or meet up in groups.

Large crowds could be seen at Hove seafront and Greenwich park in London, as temperatures reached 14C and 15C in parts of the UK.

As the warm weather approached, police urged people to adhere to lockdown guidelines, which allow people to exercise but not to meet up socially in groups.

On Friday, Sussex police, who are responsible for Hove beach, implored residents: “Don’t stop now”.

“There are concerns that after a long year of restrictions, falling infection rates, the vaccine rollout, better weather and the roadmap out of lockdown earlier this week, that people may get complacent. But the rule of 6 or 2 families doesn’t begin until 29 March,” the force said.

In Wales, police carried out spot checks on Saturday in an attempt to deter people from driving to beauty spots in the warm weather.

People face fines of £60 for breaking the stay-at-home order in place, which bans all non-essential travel. Exercise must be “undertaken locally” and people are not allowed to drive to a location to exercise, except in limited circumstances.

Alun Michael, the police and crime commissioner for south Wales, urged people “not lose all the gains that have been made”.

“There’s a great temptation this weekend, we have great weather and sport going on and this is really a big plea to say, please let’s not mess it up,” he said.

The deputy chief medical officer for England, Prof Jonathan Van-Tam, also urged people not to “relax” as the warm weekend approached, warning that “this is not a battle that we have won yet”.

Speaking at a Downing Street press briefing on Friday, Van Tam implored the public: “Do not wreck this now”.

According to the Met Office, people in England and Wales would see “barely a cloud in the sky” across much of the afternoon.

Northern Ireland and western Scotland saw cloudier skies, but in the east, Aberdeen was forecast to see the highest temperatures of the day at 15C.

Temperatures will cool on Monday, with the Met Office tweeting that people should “make the most” of the milder weather on Saturday and Sunday before the drop in temperatures.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Heavy rain could cause flash flooding in parts of UK, Met Office warns

  • UK weather: thunderstorms pose flood risk in England and Wales

  • UK weather: flood warnings as Storm Evert moves eastwards

  • Storm Evert: high winds and heavy rain to hit south-west England

  • East London hospital cancels operations after flooding

  • Thunderstorms leave roads and tube stations flooded in London

  • ‘Something’s not right’: Northern Irish townland has its 31.2C day in the sun

  • UK weather: heatwave health alert for England extended to Friday

  • Met Office issues first ever extreme heat warning for UK

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