Social media users ask why Cheltenham Festival is on amid coronavirus fears

Playing the odds? Tens of thousands of revellers pack Cheltenham racecourse despite coronavirus fears as critics warn it’s ‘a ticking timebomb’

  • Cheltenham Festival is branded ‘ticking timebomb’ amid coronavirus outbreak
  • Up to 70,000 spectators expected to attend the first day of horse racing event 
  • Concerns have been raised over why the meet was allowed to go ahead
  • It comes as the killer virus claimed its sixth victim today, with 373 cases in total 

Cheltenham Festival has been branded a ‘ticking timebomb’ and after bosses made the decision to go ahead with the four day event despite the coronavirus outbreak.

Up to 70,000 spectators are expected to attend the first day of the annual horse racing festival with fans travelling from across Britain to the Gloucestershire course.

But concerns have been raised over why the meet, which begins today, was allowed to go ahead as the killer virus claimed its sixth victim in the UK, with 373 cases across the country.

His death comes after leading experts today warned Britain may be heading straight for a coronavirus crisis like the one which has crippled Italy. 

Social media users have questioned the decision to go ahead, with more than 260,000 fans expected to travel to the course over the four days.

One said: ‘A total joke that Cheltenham is going ahead , are people not listening , it’s a ticking time bomb.’

Another said: ‘Allowing Cheltenham2020 to proceed is one of the most irresponsible decisions made by the British government in decades. Its clear human live are irrelevant against monetary gains.’

Up to 70,000 spectators are expected to attend the first day of the annual horse racing festival with fans travelling from across Britain to the Gloucestershire course

 

Speaking earlier this week a Cheltenham Racecourse spokesman confirmed there were no plans to postpone the event.

He said: ‘British Racing has been in close communication with the Government.

‘We welcome the guidance that the business of the country should continue as usual at this time, while ensuring we adhere to the latest public health advice in full.’

Hand sanitiser stations have also been installed at Cheltenham Racecourse in response to the Coronavirus outbreak. 

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said that events such as Cheltenham should go ahead as planned despite cancellations and postponements being made public in other European countries.

‘We are guided by the facts and we are guided by the evidence.

‘At the moment the advice is clear from the chief medical officer: there isn’t a need to cancel such events.’