Daily Mail

Virus data that shows we can get UK f lying

Holidaymak­ers ‘no more likely to get infected than if at home’

- By Tom Payne Transport Correspond­ent

TRAVEL bosses demanded an end to quarantine last night as data revealed the infection rates of people who travel abroad are similar to those who stay at home.

Ministers insist the 14-day quarantine policy is essential to stop large numbers of coronaviru­s cases being brought into the country.

An ONS study previously found that there were more cases of the virus among people who had travelled abroad compared to those who had not.

But data from September 25 to October 8 shows there is now barely any difference between the two groups.

According to the study 0.58 per cent of people who recently travelled abroad tested positive for coronaviru­s. This compared to 0.49 per cent who tested positive having not left the country.

Katherine Kent, co-head of analysis for the ONS Covid-19 infection survey, said: ‘Analysis now shows that, unlike before, there is no longer a difference in the rate of infections between those who have travelled abroad and those who haven’t.’

Aviation industry leaders said the study proves there is little justificat­ion for forcing passengers to quarantine on arrival.

The policy has been blamed for destroying the holiday hopes of millions while severely hampering Britain’s economic recovery.

The Daily Mail’s Get Britain Flying Again campaign has led calls for the rule to be scrapped and replaced with an air passenger testing regime to rescue the aviation industry and bolster the economy.

Business chiefs have warned failure to act will lead to tens of thousands of job losses in the months to come as airports and airlines desperatel­y try to save money.

Although Transport Secretary Grant Shapps recently announced a ‘global travel taskforce’ to look at halving the quarantine time to seven days, airline executives say any length of quarantine will continue to strangle the economy.

Travel consultant Paul Charles, of The PC Agency, said: ‘The Government’s own statistics now show that those entering the UK hardly carry the virus, so the current blunt quarantine rules should be abandoned.’

Julia Lo Bue- Said, chief executive of the Advantage Travel Partnershi­p of travel agents, said: ‘The recent addition of the Canary Islands last week onto the safe corridor list provided a much-needed boost to the industry and customers alike. Let’s keep the momentum going, get rid of quarantine regulation­s that have no bearing on our health and focus on a considered testing regime to getting the country travelling safely again.’

It comes as Airports Council Internatio­nal revealed yesterday that nearly 200 airports in Europe will face insolvency in the coming months if passenger traffic does not start recovering by the end of the year. Sources said this includes regional airports in the UK.

Olivier Jankovec, directorge­neral of ACI, said: ‘The figures paint a dramatical­ly bleak picture. Eight months into the crisis, all of Europe’s airports are burning through cash to remain open, with revenues far from covering the costs of operations, let alone capital costs.’

Separately the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n warned yesterday that the average airline has just 8.5 months of cash left.

The global trade body predicted a 46 per cent drop in total industry revenues in 2021 compared to 2019.

Alexandre de Juniac, directorge­neral of IATA, said: ‘Unless government­s act fast, some 1.3million airline jobs are at risk. And that would have a domino effect putting 3.5million additional jobs in the aviation sector in jeopardy along with a total of 46million people in the broader economy whose jobs are supported by aviation.’

A Department for Transport spokesman said: ‘We’re now working at pace to make internatio­nal travel smoother and our global travel taskforce is exploring how a testing model can be implemente­d in the UK.’

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