Western Mail

PM: Cautious approach to holidays needed to avoid influx of Covid-19

- AINE FOX and NEIL LANCEFIELD newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE approach to foreign travel this summer will be sensible and cautious to avoid “an influx of disease”, Boris Johnson has said.

The Prime Minister said there will be “some opening up” on May 17, but that things must be done in a way “to make sure that we don’t see the virus coming back in” to the UK.

Mr Johnson’s cautious tone came as some MPs called for restrictio­ns on foreign holidays to be maintained to protect the country from Covid-19 variants, and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer urged a “careful” approach.

Mr Johnson told reporters during a campaign visit to Hartlepool: “We do want to do some opening up on May 17 but I don’t think that the people of this country want to see an influx of disease from anywhere else.

“I certainly don’t and we have got to be very, very tough, and we have got to be as cautious as we can, whilst we continue to open up.”

Asked if people should be planning foreign holidays, he told reporters: “We will be saying more as soon as we can. I think that there will be some openings up on the 17th, but we have got to be cautious and we have got to be sensible and we have got to make sure that we don’t see the virus coming back in.”

Sir Keir criticised the “chopping and changing” of the travel corridors list introduced last year and said such a situation should be avoided this holiday season.

Speaking during a campaign visit to Lewisham yesterday, the opposition leader said he will “wait and see” what the Government announces.

He told reporters: “We need to be very careful. I think it’s clear that the virus is increasing in some countries around the world, so we have to be very, very careful,” he told reporters.

“What we can’t have is a repeat of last summer, where the lists were chopping and changing on a daily or even weekly basis.”

It comes as the European Commission proposed to ease restrictio­ns on travel to countries in the bloc amid progressin­g vaccinatio­n campaigns and lower infection rates.

The commission said it is proposing “to allow entry to the EU for non-essential reasons not only for all persons coming from countries with a good epidemiolo­gical situation, but also all people who have received the last recommende­d dose of an EU-authorised vaccine”.

It was not said which countries would be on its list, but one unnamed EU official said the UK remains a “question mark”.

One travel firm boss said there had been “great progress” in countries such as Portugal and Spain in preparing for the return of holidaymak­ers.

Thomas Cook chief executive Alan French told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “When the holidays proper start at the end of June, we are expecting most of the countries that the UK goes on holiday to – Europe particular­ly – to be open.

“We are expecting Portugal, Spain, Greece, Croatia and so forth to be open, it would be nice if Turkey was open.

“When we look at what is going on in those countries, both in terms of infection rates and how they are preparing for holidaymak­ers, I think there is great progress being made.”

The All-Party Parliament­ary Group (APPG) on Coronaviru­s has claimed the importatio­n of new variants could “lead to further lockdowns, and inevitably, further loss of life”.

The cross-party group described airport arrival halls as “a breeding ground for infection”.

It recommende­d that passengers returning from green, amber and red countries under the new risk-based traffic light system do not mix.

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