The Daily Telegraph

Travel chiefs call for masks to be mandatory on planes

Ministers urged to bring in legislatio­n after industry says outbreak on Tui flight shows it can’t enforce rules

- By Georgina Hayes

CABIN crew are unable to force passengers into wearing face masks, tourist industry bosses have warned, after an outbreak on a Tui flight where travellers were “disregardi­ng the rules”.

Travel chiefs have cautioned that there is likely to be a rise in the number of coronaviru­s outbreaks on planes after 16 cases were linked to the flight from Zante to Cardiff.

Steve Freudmann, chairman of the Institute of Travel and Tourism, said that a change in the rules was now necessary because the current measures meant there is “very little” cabin crew can do to get passengers to wear face masks.

“The general consensus in the travel industry is that it’s very unfair on tour operators and airlines in asking them to become enforcers,” he said.

Unlike with shops and public transport, there is currently no law mandating that passengers wear face coverings on flights. However the introducti­on of such a law is something that the ITT would like to see. “Until there’s a law, there’s very little they [cabin crew] can do,” he told The Daily Telegraph.

“They either have to help us by passing some form of legislatio­n, and if they don’t, then I think the outbreaks we’ve seen this weekend probably will become more frequent.”

He added: “It would give everybody more confidence if indeed it was made compulsory. It would certainly help the staff placed in a very difficult position at the moment. When you have a noncomplia­nt passenger, what can you do? We want to do our best, but we need the Government to lead on this one.”

A Tui insider said that while the vast majority of passengers are “really obliging”, if a passenger isn’t doing what they’re asked then crew members “can’t do anything more” than ask them to follow the rules.

It follows accusation­s from Stephanie Whitfield, a passenger on board the Tui flight who is now being forced to quarantine, that fellow fliers seemed to “disregard the rules”.

Describing the flight as a “debacle”, Ms Whitfield said that “lots of the people were wearing face masks underneath their noses or even underneath their chins”, as well as taking their masks off to talk to friends and “going up and down the aisles” without masks on.

The “vast majority” of people breaking the rules “weren’t being spoken to” by the crew, she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. All 193 people on the flight have now been told to self-isolate, and Tui is launching a “full investigat­ion” into Ms Whitfield’s claims.

Passengers are informed prior to travel and via PA announceme­nt on the flight that they have to wear masks throughout and that they are not allowed to move around the cabin, a spokesman from Tui said, and masks can only be removed when consuming food and drink.

Unite, the union for aviation workers, has echoed the ITT’S claims that the onus of enforcing rules around face coverings should not be on cabin staff.

“The UK government and the civil aviation authoritie­s must promote and enforce a clear policy on the wearing of face coverings and masks for airline passengers,” they told The Telegraph in a statement. They added: “Passengers should be informed of such a policy, and that refusal... will incur denied boarding, removal from a flight, or a financial penalty and even a travel ban.”

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