Half-empty supermarkets due to Brexit and Covid, England asks for help from the military to bring food

Half-empty shelves, products that are in short supply: in some areas of the United Kingdom, Brexit, the pandemic as well as the high number of citizens forced to isolate themselves because they came into contact with a case of Covid have had an impact on the food distribution chain and others basic necessities, so much so that the army is ready to take action to unblock the situation. This is the new issue that the British government is facing: supply problems, especially in the most peripheral areas of the country, started after many employees were stuck in isolation due to the new increase in Covid infections.

The problem is the lack of truckers, 100,000 fewer than in pre-Covid times according to data from the Road Haulage Association (RHA), the association for trucking. According to the British press, these are mainly citizens of Eastern Europe who, with the restrictions on travel due to the virus and Brexit, have opted for other countries. A spokesman for Downing Street confirmed that military intervention is among the options under consideration to deal with the situation that, according to the main supermarket chains in the country, is serious: “We can barely keep our heads out of the way water,” explained Chris Hall, Asda’s head of logistics.

On the military front, two thousand drivers of the Royal Logistics Corps would be ready to intervene. To speed up the operation, they could be sent to various areas of the country and stay in hotels and hostels. The pandemic has blocked license exams. For the RHA, thousands of future truck drivers are waiting for the tests to obtain the documents necessary to carry out the activity, but not enough to cope with the shortage. “Arranging the intervention of the army is a short-term solution,” underlined a spokesman for the association. “We have to ask ourselves how to attract the drivers we need.”

With the total reopening announced by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, up to 200,000 cases a day were expected, according to the most catastrophic scientists. Instead, to date, there are much less, about 30 thousand. And so “no more lockdowns and distancing in the future,” headlines the Times. While in the United States there is the alarm for the Delta variant and there are soon 100,000 new cases a day feared, in London, there is optimism about the progress of the Coronavirus crisis.

Admin

Recent Posts

Why MacKenzie Scott’s Wealth Keeps Growing Even After Giving Away Billions

For most people, donating billions of dollars would dramatically shrink their fortune. But for philanthropist MacKenzie Scott, the opposite has… Read More

April 30, 2026

UAE’s Bold OPEC Exit: Turbocharging Oil Recovery After Hormuz Reopens?

The United Arab Emirates just announced a major change in the oil industry: it is leaving OPEC and OPEC+ starting… Read More

April 30, 2026

iPhone 18 Pro Leaks Show Off Bold New Colors But Apple Fans Are Asking One Big Question

Apple fans woke up to a flood of fresh leaks on Thursday, and one detail instantly stole the spotlight: the… Read More

April 30, 2026

Netflix in May 2026: 5 New Shows and Movies Everyone Will Be Talking About

The Netflix team is gearing up for May 2026 with an offering that is likely to cater to almost all… Read More

April 30, 2026

48-Team World Cup 2026 Panini Album Sparks Outrage as Completion Costs Soar Past £1,000

For generations of football fans, few traditions have matched the excitement of opening a fresh pack of Panini stickers during… Read More

April 30, 2026

Unveiling Muslim Brotherhood Networks in Ukraine: Cross-Border Influence Exposed

The Muslim Brotherhood's hidden connections to Ukraine and Europe deserve attention. They operate through multiple NGOs and ideological channels. These… Read More

April 30, 2026

This website uses cookies.

Read More