Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.K. FINDS

- PAUL SCHEMM AND SIOBHAN O’GRADY Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Niha Masih of The Washington Post.

variant of virus linked to South African visitors.

U.K. Health Secretary Matt Hancock said Wednesday that Britain has found two cases of a coronaviru­s variant linked to South Africa, with both of them tied to contact with recent arrivals from that country.

Hancock announced new restrictio­ns on visitors from South Africa and called on anyone who has recently been to that country or been in contact with a recent arrival from there to self-isolate immediatel­y, describing the measures as temporary while officials seek to better understand the variant.

“This virus is highly concerning because it is yet more transmissi­ble and appears to have mutated further than the new variant that’s been discovered in the U.K.,” he said at a news conference.

South African officials announced last week that their scientists had detected a new variant that appeared to be fueling a rapid rise in infections there.

The appearance of the South African variant in Britain comes as its officials are already grappling with a worsening coronaviru­s outbreak linked to a different variant recently discovered in England.

Experts have cautioned that both variants need additional study as scientists seek to better understand the mutations and what effect — if any — they will have on vaccines.

British authoritie­s are tightening restrictio­ns in response to the increase in cases. By Saturday, about 24 million people will face Britain’s toughest coronaviru­s rules, under which all nonessenti­al businesses are required to close.

Many countries in Europe and elsewhere closed their borders to British travelers in recent days to try to limit the spread of the variant discovered in England. Some also placed restrictio­ns on people traveling from South Africa.

France banned freight across the English Channel, one of Europe’s busiest travel corridors, for 48 hours. On Wednesday, ferry passengers began to trickle back into France from Britain after a late-night agreement between the countries to allow some people back into France, provided they could show negative coronaviru­s test results.

It will take days, however, to move the thousands of freight trucks stranded on the British side of the English Channel as all the drivers are tested.

British Home Secretary Priti Patel tweeted Wednesday that mass testing has begun and that the “priority is to get lorries moving.”

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick estimated that at least 4,000 trucks were parked around the Kent region and said the military would manage testing sites, including one at Manston airport, where many of the trucks are located.

Patel urged people to avoid traveling to Kent because of major congestion, saying an increase in travelers “will slow things down.”

TV footage showed truck drivers scuffling with police and honking their horns in protest after being stranded for days, often far from even the most basic sanitation facilities. Many face the prospect of missing Christmas with their families.

In interviews on local television, truckers picketing the port town of Dover said there was no movement, no apparent testing and no hygiene facilities for them.

“What we’ve got this morning is very, very angry truckers in Dover,” Rod McKenzie of the Road Haulage Associatio­n told the BBC. “They’re tired, frustrated, desperatel­y want to get home for Christmas.”

Concern over the new variants comes as Britain is attempting to negotiate the terms of its future relations with the European Union and as much of the country is enduring the new lockdowns coinciding with the Christmas season.

As many European countries rushed to impose new rules on travelers from Britain, the European Commission on Tuesday urged EU member states to coordinate their response and lift bans on flights, trains and freight, citing “the need to ensure essential travel and avoid supply chain disruption­s.”

Some countries chose to maintain or expand their prohibitio­ns anyway, while others eased their restrictio­ns but requested polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, coronaviru­s tests for new arrivals.

India has suspended flights from Britain until the end of the year. Meanwhile, it plans to track down all passengers who arrived from Britain in the past month. Officials across India have been asked to track and monitor the health of the passengers for the next two weeks.

About a dozen passengers from Britain have tested positive for the coronaviru­s on arrival in four Indian cities in recent days, according to local media reports. Their samples are being examined for the variant detected in England, and they are being kept in quarantine pending the results.

 ?? (AP/Steve Parsons) ?? Hundreds of trucks wait at Manston in the Kent district of England to travel by ferry to France after France lifted a coronaviru­s ban at the border. But, under the agreement, anyone seeking to cross the channel must test negative for the coronaviru­s.
(AP/Steve Parsons) Hundreds of trucks wait at Manston in the Kent district of England to travel by ferry to France after France lifted a coronaviru­s ban at the border. But, under the agreement, anyone seeking to cross the channel must test negative for the coronaviru­s.

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