Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Swann reveals new rules for NI travellers

Arrivals may be ordered to stay in ‘quarantine hotels’ Negative test and 10-day isolation are now compulsory

- BY LIZZY BUCHAN Political Correspond­ent

JUST THE SWOB Test centre at Heathrow

TRAVELLERS arriving in the UK face being forced to self-isolate in hotels – months after other countries took similar steps – amid growing fears over mutant Covid variants.

Compulsory quarantine for all arrivals is finally introduced today, 353 days after the UK’S first confirmed case.

It comes after experts accused the Government of being “lax” over border controls as cases and deaths spiral.

From now until at least February 15, arrivals must prove they tested negative in the past 72 hours and quarantine where they are staying for 10 days. Curbs were meant to start on Friday but were delayed, allowing people to pour into the UK unchecked.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab dismissed claims the move had come too late. And during a TV grilling, he said ministers “considered all possibilit­ies” CRITICISM when asked if New Dominic Raab

Zealand-style quarantine hotels were an option here.

Strict rules have been in place in New Zealand and in Australia for months. Both nations closed their borders to almost all arrivals last March, with any internatio­nal travellers forced to isolate in hotels for 14 days.

The UK is also playing catch-up by introducin­g mandatory testing for travellers, which have long been in place in countries such as France and Spain.

Ministers earlier came under fire for dithering before banning flights from South America on Friday after the highly transmissi­ble Brazil variant emerged.

SAGE expert Prof John Edmunds said there had been many failings. The

INTERNATIO­NAL travellers will need a negative Covid-19 test before coming to Northern Ireland, the Department of Health announced yesterday.

The “pre-departure testing for all internatio­nal arrivals” rules come into place from Thursday.

The Department says passengers “from all internatio­nal destinatio­ns must produce a negative result to help protect against rising infection rates and new variants of coronaviru­s circulatin­g internatio­nally”.

Health Minister Robin Swann added: “This additional measure will provide another layer of protection to help reduce the risk of imported infections, while national lockdown and vaccinatio­n take effect.” Yesterday the Department said internatio­nal travellers “will be required to provide proof of a negative Covid-19 test result, taken within the 72 hour period before departure, to their transport operator”.

Quarantine has been lax, for arrivals and for those in contact with cases SAGE’S PROF EDMUNDS ON THE GOVERNMENT’S APPROACH

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine epidemiolo­gist told Times Radio: “If you’re going to have quarantine then you should probably make it as effective as you can. Ours has been rather lax – not just for visitors coming into the UK, the vast majority of whom do not have Covid

– also with quarantine of individual­s in contact with indigenous cases. We’ve been pretty lax about that.”

As well as New Zealand’s approach, Poland’s use of GPS and facial-recognitio­n to ensure self-isolation rules are followed is also said to be an option.

Mr Raab told Sky’s Sophy Ridge on

Sunday: “We will consider all the measures in the round. We are going to be strengthen­ing checks at the border, so when people come in to make sure they have filled out the passenger location form, that they have that negative test they have to vouch for before they get on the flight.”

In another interview, he said: “I don’t accept we have been too slow in this – we are broadly the same pace in terms of Canada and Germany.”

Labour’s Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary Jonathan Reynolds demanded to know why it had taken almost a year and tens of thousands of deaths for new rules to come in. He said: “We have seen what went on in other countries and I think we were told those restrictio­ns weren’t effective, they weren’t worth doing but clearly they are so I don’t understand why it’s taken so long.”

Lucy Moreton, of the Immigratio­n

ARRIVALS are charged to stay at an airport hotel in isolation for 14 days and have to test negative before leaving. Stays cost up to £1,630.

Country’s strict rules mean there have only been 2,256 cases and deaths limited to 25.

Services Union, told the Home Affairs Committee last week only one in 10 arrivals were being checked to ensure they complied with previous rules.

Mr Raab also said people should not plan holidays with the NHS “on the cusp” of being overwhelme­d. “People should be staying at home unless absolutely necessary.” Foreign travel is largely banned under lockdown.

It is another blow to aviation bosses who have issued pleas for urgent support as airports face “nearcomple­te shutdown”. But Aviation Minister Robert Courts promised on Saturday grants would be available by the end of March.

 ?? ?? PLANE SAILING Travellers at Heathrow, yesterday
PLANE SAILING Travellers at Heathrow, yesterday

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