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MATT Hancock today warned the Indian variant is now responsible for three quarters of all new Covid cases in the UK.

The Health Secretary said the dominant strain is still spreading fast as a further 3,542 new infections were recorded in the last 24-hour period.

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Matt Hancock has warned that the Indian variant now makes up 75 per cent of new UK Covid cases
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Matt Hancock has warned that the Indian variant now makes up 75 per cent of new UK Covid casesCredit: AP
A queue of people wait outside the Covid mobile testing station in Shiremoor, North Tyneside
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A queue of people wait outside the Covid mobile testing station in Shiremoor, North TynesideCredit: NNP
Cases are up from yesterday and the highest since April 12
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Cases are up from yesterday and the highest since April 12

Daily Covid cases have surged past 3,000 for the second day in a row and infections today hit the highest they've been in six weeks.

Speaking at a Downing Street press conference tonight, Hancock warned: "This isn't over yet."

He said the Indian variant was responsible for three-quarters of all new cases across Britain - and urged eligible people to go and get their vaccine.

Dr Jenny Harries told the public: "We have to be really, really vigilant."

Meanwhile, Hancock added: "We are in a race between the vaccine and the virus.

"We've got to get the vaccines out fast. And that is the thing that really, really matters."

It comes as...

The latest infection figures bring the total since the pandemic began to 4,473,677.

The last time daily coronavirus cases surpassed 3,500 was on April 12 when 3,568 new infections were recorded.

The number of people testing positive each day continues to rise, up from yesterday's 3,180.

And it is also significantly higher than this time last month, when 2,060 new cases were recorded.

A further 10 deaths were reported in the latest 24-hour period, meaning the UK's Covid death toll now stands at 127,758.

This is up from just four on May 20, five on May 13 - but down from 36 two months ago on March 27.

The latest government data also shows a whopping 62,658,639 vaccinations have been administered in the UK.

This includes 38,614,683 first doses and 24,043,956 second doses, meaning more than 24 million Brits are almost fully protected against Covid-19.

Hancock urged people to get their jabs as the "best way" out of the pandemic.

He said that of the 49 people in hospital with coronavirus in Bolton, only five have had both doses of vaccine.

And he said cases of the Indian variant remain focused in "hotspots" where surge testing and extra vaccinations have been rolled out to combat it.

Despite a stonking vaccination programme, Boris Johnson today poured fresh doubt on June 21's 'freedom day' as Matt Hancock said it was too early to tell if the full unlocking can go ahead.

The PM said as far as he can see there's nothing in the data to suggest a delay but that "we might have to wait" to make final decisions in the next week or two.

A "formal assessment" of data will take place next week - as medics grow increasingly gloomy about the new surge.

A man receives the Pfizer vaccine at the Masjid E Sajadeen Mosque in Blackburn
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A man receives the Pfizer vaccine at the Masjid E Sajadeen Mosque in BlackburnCredit: Mercury

Under the roadmap, June 21 was set to be the day life finally returned to normal.

The PM had considered ending social distancing and wearing masks altogether after the jabs rollout and winter lockdown forced both cases and deaths downwards.

But the spread of the Indian variant now looks set to delay the day millions of Brits have been awaiting for more than a year.

While there's hope a double dose of the jab can guard against severe illness from the variant, 10 per cent of those hospitalised with it are already fully vaccinated.

It's a sign that, while the jab works well, the mutation can still get around inoculation in some cases.

'MUST BE VIGILANT'

Hancock said during the briefing: "Thankfully the uptake is very high. We monitor these new variants really carefully.

";Thankfully the effectiveness of the variant first identified in India after two jabs, does appear to be the same as against the old Kent variant.

"That means we can have confidence in the strategy that has been working.

"But of course, we have to be vigilant to the number of cases."

The bad news comes as one expert said people under the age of 21 may be more vulnerable to the worrying mutation.

Prof Neil Ferguson, whose models on UK Covid deaths led to the first national lockdown, revealed there is a “signal” in the data that it’s spreading more quickly in the young.

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He said the Indian variant was now "the dominant strain" in the UK and the full reopening of society next month "hangs in the balance".

And Prof Ravi Gupta, a microbiologist at Cambridge University, has warned Brits must brace for more "weird things" from Covid - including "super mutant viruses" - and said: "This is just the beginning."

Boris Johnson casts fresh doubt on June 21 freedom day and says 'we might have to wait'
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