Tourism

Quarantine plan for arrivals from COVID-19 hotspots still not ready


Heathrow urged ministers to ensure there is “adequate resources and appropriate protocols” for all transfers from aircraft to hotels

  • There are ‘significant gaps’ in UK government’s hotel quarantine plan
  • UK government has failed to provide ‘necessary reassurances’
  • British nationals arriving from 33 high-risk countries have to quarantine for 10 days at home or in a government-approved hotel

Starting today, British nationals arriving from 33 COVID-19 high-risk countries will have to quarantine for 10 days at home or in a government-approved hotel.

But London’s Heathrow Airport has said over the weekend that a quarantine plan for arrivals from COVID-19 hotspots is still not ready. The government has failed to provide “necessary reassurances,” it added.

“We have been working hard with the government to try to ensure the successful implementation of the policy from Monday, but some significant gaps remain, and we are yet to receive the necessary reassurances,” the airport said in a statement issued over the weekend.

Heathrow urged ministers to ensure there is “adequate resources and appropriate protocols” for all transfers from aircraft to hotels, which would “avoid compromising the safety of passengers and those working at the airport.”

The statement came just after head of the UK Parliament’s Home Affairs Committee, Yvette Cooper, said that “chaotic long queues with no social distancing” could trigger super-spreading events. The worrying signs also emerged after the booking website for the hotel quarantine scheme crashed minutes after going live.

Officials decided to tighten border controls due to fears of more contagious coronavirus variants coming from overseas, which could undermine the ongoing vaccination campaign. Cases of the South African variant have already been reported in Britain, as the country battles its own more transmissible coronavirus mutation, known locally as the ‘Kent variant’ and the ‘UK variant’ globally.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, meanwhile, asked the public for “more time” to analyze the effects of the vaccination on the infection dynamic. “I’m optimistic, but we have to be cautious,” Johnson said.



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