Tuesday, 23 Apr 2024

Tui calls for ‘regional travel corridors’

Quarantine rules should apply to people returning from regions where case numbers are high – not whole countries, a travel industry leader has said.

Andrew Flintham, head of Tui UK, wants regional travel corridors introduced.

He said there were fewer cases in the popular Algarve, where most tourists are, than elsewhere in Portugal.

It is thought likely the government will reintroduce quarantine measures for those arriving in the UK from Portugal as coronavirus cases rise.

Portugal has recorded 21.1 virus cases per 100,000 people in the past week.

The UK considers imposing 14 days of isolation on travellers when a country’s infection rate exceeds 20 cases per 100,000, over seven days.

The boss of British Airways’ parent firm, Willie Walsh, accused the government of using “arbitrary statistics to effectively ban 160 countries and in the process destroying the economy”.

The “ever-changing” quarantine requirements meant “the UK has officially hung up the ‘closed’ sign”, he said, writing in the Times.

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Using the example of Leicester, the first area in the UK to be placed under local lockdown, Andrew Flintham told the BBC: “In the UK we have a slightly different policy in the fact that we don’t lock down the whole UK when the Leicester rate goes up.

“Can we apply the same kind of principle to almost allow us to operate to those places where the rates are low or are within those thresholds?

“We don’t want to put anybody in danger but clearly it is not the same everywhere in a country,” he added.

Less than two weeks ago, Portugal came off the quarantine list and was put back on the list of countries exempt from UK rules requiring travellers to quarantine.

This prompted a rise in internet searches for last-minute flights by British holidaymakers.

Over the past month. so-called travel corridors – which allow people to travel without having to self-isolate on their return – have been scrapped between England and at least 18 countries and territories.

Ministers have said this cautious approach prevents coronavirus cases being imported.

Last week, Switzerland, Jamaica and the Czech Republic joined France, Spain and a number of others on the UK’s quarantine list.

UK tourists have spent thousands of pounds on new flights and ferries, and endured long drives in a race to get home before quarantine measures kick in.

The government has not commented on whether requirements for arrivals from Portugal will change again.

Tourists’ tale: ‘A mad stampede’

Neil Millington, who is on holiday in Madeira with his girlfriend Vitalija Mockeviciute, believes it would be ridiculous to put the Portuguese island on the quarantine list.

“There are an awful lot of English people here,” said the 51-year-old, who works in the hotel industry.

“There will be a mad stampede to get a flight back.”

They are due back from Madeira on Monday so it is likely they will have to quarantine if they stay until then. Currently they are weighing up the option of coming back early.

Every visitor to the island is tested for the virus before or on arrival, and must isolate until the results come back. Neil and Vitalija got theirs back within 12 hours.

“It is a fantastic system they have here for Covid testing,” he said, pointing to the island case numbers of 157 in total.

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Every year, more than two million Britons visit Portugal, making up the largest number of overseas tourists to the country.

Most head to the Algarve in the south, drawn by sunny Atlantic beaches, picturesque fishing villages and golf courses.

Over May and June, the Portuguese government reopened its restaurants, coffee shops, museums and beaches. Hotels have mainly reopened, but nightclubs remain closed.

The government has warned that stricter measures will be put in place in mid-September as pupils return to school and some workers return to offices.

As of 31 August, the UK recorded 24 coronavirus cases per 100,000 people over the past fortnight while Portugal recorded 35.7, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

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  • Department for Transport
  • Portugal
  • British Airways

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