Hindustan Times (Noida)

UK QUARANTINE RULE

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nership agreed to by the prime ministers of the two countries in May, he said. Britain has issued thousands of visas to students, business travellers and tourists in recent months, Ellis added, while calling for further opening up of travel between the two sides.

“Some of the noise about this issue over the last few weeks just shows how keen people are to travel to the UK and I’m delighted by that. So, let’s now go further. Let’s open up more flights between the two countries, let’s get British tourists able to come in to India... let’s facilitate business travellers who are trying to come in to India with e-visas,” Ellis said.

Indians arriving in the UK before October 11 must follow the “rules for people who are not fully vaccinated”, according to the new guidelines. “If you arrive after that, you can use a vaccine certificat­e to prove your vaccinatio­n status,” a government notificati­on said.

Earlier in the day, India had said it was hopeful of finding a solution to the vaccine certificat­ion row. “Discussion­s are ongoing and we remain hopeful that some solution may emerge,” external affairs ministry spokespers­on Arindam Bagchi told a regular news briefing.

He described Britain’s travel restrictio­ns on Indian nationals with valid vaccine certificat­es as “clearly discrimina­tory” and said measures imposed by the UK from October 4 were “not right”. He added, “We took up the issue with the UK at various levels but without success.”

Once the British travel rules came into force on October 4, India imposed “reciprocal measures” that apply only to UK nationals arriving in India from Britain.

The measures kicked in as the UK government didn’t make a call on accepting India’s vaccine certificat­ion more than 10 days after the conclusion of technical discussion­s between the two sides.

The row erupted because Indians travelling to the UK had to undergo 10-day home quarantine under new rules. The British government’s failure to recognise Covishield, an Indian version of the Britain’s Astrazenec­a jab, had also given rise to allegation­s of vaccine racism.

The UK subsequent­ly included Covishield in its list of approved vaccines.

As part of an update of its travel rules, the UK also removed 47 countries and territorie­s from its “red list”. From October 11, the red list will be reduced to seven countries, and proof of vaccinatio­n will be recognised from 37 new countries and territorie­s, including India, Brazil, Ghana, Hong Kong, Pakistan, South Africa and Turkey.

Eligible travellers vaccinated in these 37 countries and territorie­s will “be treated the same as returning fully vaccinated UK residents, so long as they have not visited a red list country or territory in the 10 days before arriving in England”, an official statement said.

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