The Scotsman

Sturgeon prefers ‘four-nations approach’ on reopening travel

- By DALE MILLER newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Nicola Sturgeon has insisted she would prefer restrictio­ns on foreign travel to be relaxed on a “four-nations basis”.

The First Minister claimed on Tuesday night she would rather work with the UK Government on restrictio­ns, but warned she would only agree to a joint policy if it was in Scotland’s “interests”.

Her declaratio­n came during the BBC leaders’ debate where Ms Sturgeon also hinted the SNP could increase income taxes over the course of the next Scottish Parliament if "unforeseen circumstan­ces" meant ministers needed to raise more cash.

Ms Sturgeon said she wanted to get internatio­nal travel “back to normal just as much as I want to get every other aspect of our lives back to normal as quickly as possible”, but that it may have to wait “a little bit longer”.

She said: “It can’t be on any four-nations basis, it has got to be on the right four-nations basis.”

“I will not go along with something, if I am First Minister of course, if it is something I don’t think is in the interests of Scotland.”

The SNP leader claimed when things open up again, the focus should be on “family reunificat­ion before holidays”, but stressed the need for caution.

She added: “We have to protect our progress at home, open up much greater normality domestical­ly, then for a little bit longer it might be restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travel are the price we have to pay for that.”

The SNP have said the position on internatio­nal travel will be considered in the next Covid review, expected to be announced next Tuesday.

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar insisted Scotland should not be afraid to diverge from the rest of the UK on internatio­nal travel if it was the right thing to do.

But he stressed the major frustratio­n for the tourism and aviation industries had been the lack of communicat­ion as he called for them to be given a clear route map back to normality.

Ms Sturgeon insisted a decision had not yet been taken on foreign travel, but stressed it would be one of the first made by the country’s leader in the week after Thursday’s election.

It came during a debate that also saw Mr Sarwar commit to ending private involvemen­t in social care as one of Scottish Labour's long-term ambitions.

Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross responded that people were "understand­ably still concerned about taking the virus back into Scotland and the UK".

He stressed: "We do have to be cautious because we don't want to see mutations of the virus brought back into Scotland when we have been so successful in getting on top of the virus."

Scottish Greens co-leader Patrick Harvie pointed out most countries had not made as much progress in vaccinatin­g people as has been managed in the UK.

He said: "While the world is still waiting to be vaccinated, and most countries are not doing that at the scale and pace we are here in Scotland, there is still going to be that risk that we import new cases, potentiall­y new, more dangerous variants.

"If we want to ease the restrictio­ns at home and see more of our day to day lives get back to normal, my suspicion is internatio­nal travel for nonessenti­al reasons will have to be one of the latest things that resumes."

Questioned on other aspects of Scotland’s Covid recovery, Mr Sarwar said Scottish Labour would look to end private involvemen­t in social care as a "longer-term ambition".

Mr Sarwar, whose party supports the establishm­ent of a national care service, said getting the sector into public hands would not happen "overnight". When pushed on whether he would support scrapping private care homes, Mr Sarwar said: "That's a longer-term ambition, but if we're going to deliver [a national care service] over the next parliament, it has to done as a partnershi­p between the public sector, voluntary sector and third sector."

Mr Harvie also agreed with Mr Sarwar's ambition, while Lib Dem leader Willie Rennie said his party was "very wary" of the idea.

Ms Sturgeon also agreed with taking profit out of care saying that was the direction of travel .

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