Bangkok Post

Relief ahead for vaccinated travellers

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British travellers who have received both doses of a coronaviru­s vaccine will no longer need to isolate when they return home from moderate risk countries, under a plan officials expect to come into force this month.

Ministers have been working on an overhaul of pandemic rules for foreign trips to give more freedom to fully vaccinated passengers returning to England from destinatio­ns on the government’s “amber list”.

Instead of isolating at home for 10 days, travellers will be told to take Covid tests after arrival under the new rules, which were finalised yesterday and could take effect as soon as July 19, people familiar with the matter said.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps will set out the measures in a statement to the UK Parliament. He will also detail how the new rules will affect under-18s who are not currently being vaccinated.

If, as expected, the relaxation in the rules comes into force from July 19, it will be in time for England’s state school holidays, offering a boost to the ailing travel industry which has struggled with lockdowns and closed borders for more than a year.

Under existing rules on foreign travel, visitors to more than 100 destinatio­ns including the vital US market and some of the most popular European destinatio­ns are required to isolate for 10 days on their return to the UK.

That’s because these destinatio­ns are on the government’s “amber list,” rated as medium risk for coronaviru­s.

The government currently advises Britons not to travel to destinatio­ns on the amber list or the high risk red list, with only a handful of countries judged to be safe enough to put on the green list

Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his team are grappling with how best to reopen the economy now that 65% of UK adults have received both doses of Covid vaccines.

Yet even as the rollout of shots continues, a surge in infections from the delta variant is complicati­ng the government’s efforts to lift restrictio­ns.

On Wednesday, 32,548 people tested positive for Covid-19, and another 33 deaths were recorded. Officials have suggested that infections could be running as high as 100,000 new cases a day later this summer, though the government has so far refused to say how many extra deaths are expected to result from lifting restrictio­ns.

While most pandemic restrictio­ns in England will end July 19, the requiremen­t to isolate if a person has been in contact with a positive case will continue until Aug 16.

That delay to ending the isolation requiremen­t for “close contacts” has fuelled concern that millions of people will be forced to stay at home, damaging efforts to reopen businesses.

 ??  ?? Shapps: Rules to be relaxed
Shapps: Rules to be relaxed

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