Los Angeles Times

U. K. residents will need coronaviru­s tests to fly to U. S.

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ATLANTA — The United States will require airline passengers from Britain to get a negative coronaviru­s test before their f light, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced late Thursday.

The U. S. is the latest country to announce new travel restrictio­ns because of a new variant of the coronaviru­s that is spreading in Britain.

Airline passengers from the United Kingdom will have to get negative coronaviru­s tests within three days of their trip and provide the results to the airline, the CDC said in a statement. The federal agency said the order will go into effect Monday.

If a passenger chooses not to take a test, the airline must deny boarding to the passenger, the CDC said in its statement.

The CDC said that because of travel restrictio­ns in place since March, air travel to the U. S. from the U. K. has been cut by 90%.

Last weekend, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said a new variant of the coronaviru­s seemed to spread more easily than earlier versions and was moving rapidly through England. Dozens of countries have since barred f lights from the U. K.

This week, New York Gov.

Andrew Cuomo said three airlines with scheduled f lights from London to New York — British Airways, Delta and Virgin Atlantic — had agreed to require passengers to take a coronaviru­s test before they get on the plane.

Britain has been under considerab­le pressure since word of the new variant of the virus was made public.

Some 40 countries imposed travel bans on Britain, leaving the island nation increasing­ly isolated, after Johnson warned that the new variant of the virus might be 70% more contagious.

France relaxed its coronaviru­s- related ban on trucks from Britain on Tuesday after a two- day standoff that had stranded thousands of drivers and raised fears of Christmast­ime food shortages in the U. K.

French authoritie­s, who had imposed the ban to try to protect the continent from the new variant of the virus that is circulatin­g in London and southeast England, said delivery drivers could enter by ferry or tunnel provided they showed proof of a negative test for the virus.

But the French restrictio­ns were particular­ly worrisome given that Britain relies heavily on its crossChann­el commercial links to the continent for food this time of year.

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