The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Fife family in quarantine hotel error

- CONOR RIORDAN

The Scottish Government is investigat­ing after travellers heading to Fife from the US were mistakenly made to quarantine in a hotel despite a loophole in the rules.

Chun Wong and his daughter Kiernan, eight, arrived at Edinburgh Airport on Monday via a connecting flight in Dublin and were set to spend 10 days self-isolating in a nearby hotel.

However, Mr Wong was contacted by officials later to tell him he did not need to abide by the rules.

He and his daughter will now self-isolate at home in Fife.

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “We are looking into the circumstan­ces that led to Mr Wong being wrongly advised he needed to book a managed isolation package and would like to thank the family for their patience.

“This is a very new system, being implemente­d at pace, and some initial challenges are to be expected.

“However, once the error was identified, the family were contacted and advised they could make alternativ­e arrangemen­ts for their selfisolat­ion period.”

People flying directly into a Scottish airport on internatio­nal flights have to self-isolate for 10 days in a quarantine hotel room, under new regulation­s taking effect on Monday.

Unless exempt, a passenger will have to pay £1,750 to quarantine in a room at one of six designated hotels.

In England, the UK Government will only require hotel quarantine for visitors from a “red list” of 33 countries designated as high risk, meaning travellers arriving from elsewhere could avoid it by entering Scotland via England.

It is understood the pair were the first to be taken to a hotel for quarantine in Scotland.

Mr Wong told the BBC: “I received a call from reception saying a gentleman from the airport would like to talk to me.

“He said that since I landed in Dublin first and then got a connecting flight to here, I was not required to quarantine in a hotel.

“I still have to quarantine and do the self-testing kit on the second and eighth day, but they said it was an error on their part.”

Mr Wong added he could have left the hotel on Monday evening, but decided to stay the night as he was tired. He departed the hotel with his daughter yesterday.

Linda Bauld, professor of public health at Edinburgh University, said: “Clearly everybody listening will realise that it doesn’t make sense.

“While I have sympathy for this family, just to emphasise, the fact that they’ve stopped for a few hours in Dublin means that the rules don’t apply, that doesn’t make sense to me.”

The Scottish Conservati­ves transport spokesman Graham Simpson MSP said the family “should never have been put in a hotel in the first place”.

Scottish Labour transport spokesman Colin Smyth said the policy had “fallen flat at the first hurdle”.

 ??  ?? FREE TO GO: Chun Wong, left, and his daughter Kiernan leave the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel at Edinburgh Airport.
FREE TO GO: Chun Wong, left, and his daughter Kiernan leave the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel at Edinburgh Airport.

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