Scotland will go into a new lockdown with people ordered to stay at home for the rest of January to tackle the escalating COVID-19 crisis.
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon told the Scottish parliament that from midnight on Monday people would face a legal requirement to stay at home except for essential purposes.
Schools will close for all but the children of essential workers.
It is similar to the lockdown imposed at the start of the pandemic in March last year.
"The situation ... is extremely serious," Sturgeon said.
She added that the new variant accounted for nearly half of new cases in Scotland and is 70 per cent more transmissible.
The United Kingdom has the world's sixth-highest official coronavirus death toll - 75,024 - and the number of new infections is soaring across the country.
England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland implement their own COVID-19 responses though they are trying to coordinate more across the UK.
Prince Harry said on Friday that he wanted reconciliation with the British royal family but his father King Charles will not speak to him over a row over his security and he did not know how long the monarch, who has cancer, would live.
A magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck Drake Passage between Cape Horn and Antarctica at a depth of 10 km (6 miles) on Friday, the United States Geological Survey said.
A ship with humanitarian aid and activists for Gaza was bombed by drones while in international waters off Malta early on Friday, its organisers said, and the Maltese government said after a rescue operation that everyone on board was safe.
A power outage hit several regions of Indonesia's resort island of Bali on Friday and efforts were underway to restore services to those affected, state utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara said.
A Russian drone attack late on Thursday set buildings ablaze in Ukraine's southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia, injuring 29 people, regional governor Ivan Fedorov said.
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