Britain's government on November 28 defended the pace and scale of its response to the new Omicron strain of Covid-19 as officials reported a third case of the emerging variant, and warned of more to come.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said mandatory mask-wearing would return to shops and public transport in England on November 30, but told families to plan for Christmas “as normal”, despite new rules to combat Omicron.

Also effective November 30, the government’s website instructs all passengers entering the UK to take a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test for Covid-19 two days after their arrival, and to self-isolate until they receive a negative result.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson had announced the tougher measures at news conference on November 27, hours after the UK confirmed its first two Omicron cases, but did not specify when they would take effect.

A third case was confirmed on November 28 by the UK Health Security Agency, but it said the person had already left the country after visiting the Westminster area of London – where parliament is located – having travelled from southern Africa.

The agency said it was “very likely that we will find more cases over the coming days . . . as we increase case detection through focused contact tracing”.

British Airways meanwhile said it had taken the “difficult decision” to suspend flights to Hong Kong after a crew member tested positive for Covid, having been negative on leaving the UK.

Services to and from the former UK colony in China have already been scaled back sharply due to its strict Covid curbs.

Johnson was widely criticised for his own travel and quarantine policy earlier in the pandemic when he kept UK borders open even as infection rates surged, yielding Britain one of the world’s worst per-capita death tolls from Covid.

The government controversially dropped the masks mandate in July for England, after a prior lockdown, while the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland kept it in place.

All four UK nations are expected to adopt the same PCR rule, after England again diverged in July by requiring only a simple lateral flow test for incoming passengers on flights, ships and trains.

‘Holes in the defences’

Travel from 10 countries in southern Africa is now banned because of Omicron, but Javid conceded that hundreds of passengers had arrived on flights from South Africa on November 26 without being tested.

But he told BBC television: “I think the speed at which we acted at could not have been any faster.”

Javid added that the government was “nowhere near” reintroducing social distancing rules and work-from-home guidance, which were also controversially discarded in

England earlier this year against the advice of scientists.

He said it was too soon to judge the effectiveness of existing vaccines against Omicron, as drugs manufacturers rush to research new treatments against the emergent strain.

But the government is seeking approval from its Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) to expand the rollout of booster jabs, shortening the time-frame between second and third shots, and broadening the age range to all over-18s.

The JCVI is expected to respond early this week, Javid said.

The opposition Labour party said the government was again doing too little, too late after Omicron emerged.

Even after November 30, passengers can enter Britain without a pre-departure test and travel freely from their port of entry on public transport, Labour’s foreign affairs spokeswoman Lisa Nandy noted.

“We desperately want to see them tighten up the travel restrictions,” she said on Sky News.

“There is a real problem when for 18 months the government has been warned that there are holes in those defences and still hasn’t taken action to plug [them].”