Glasgow Times

Manchester travel ban not ‘proportion­ate’

City mayor calls for holiday compensati­on

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GREATER Manchester mayor Andy Burnham has accused the Scottish Government of “hypocrisy” over a travel ban to the North West.

Nicola Sturgeon announced on Friday all non-essential travel to Manchester and Salford would be banned from Monday, but the Labour mayor said he or his administra­tion were not contacted before the announceme­nt. The First Minister, right, pinpointed the areas as Covid-19 hotspots, despite figures in the cities matching case rates in parts of Scotland.

“Anyone travelling elsewhere in the Greater Manchester or Lancashire area, I’d ask to think carefully about whether your journey is really necessary, because we do see cases rising across that region,” she said on Friday in a coronaviru­s briefing.

Speaking on The Andrew Marr

Show on Sunday, Mr Burnham said: “I was really disappoint­ed on Friday that the First Minister of Scotland just announced out of the blue, as far as we were concerned, a travel ban saying that people couldn’t travel from Scotland to Manchester and Salford and people couldn’t go the other way.

“That is exactly what the SNP always accuse the Westminste­r Government of doing, riding roughshod over people. The SNP are treating the north of England with the same contempt in bringing that in without any consultati­on with us.”

He added: “I just think it’s double standards, it’s hypocrisy. They’ve done to us exactly what they always complain that the UK Government does to Scotland.”

Mr Burnham said he would be looking for his constituen­ts who planned to travel north of the border to be financiall­y compensate­d by the Scottish Government.

“I’ll be writing to the First Minister today,” he said.

“I’ll be asking for compensati­on for the individual­s who might lose holidays and the businesses who might lose bookings.

“Why should a couple from Salford who are double jabbed who are about to go on a walking holiday in Scotland not be able to go?

“It’s completely disproport­ionate in my view - we could have come up with a different arrangemen­t if the First Minister had been in touch with us.”

Mr Burnham went on to say there should be “an arrangemen­t” put in place, which would mean there would have to be consultati­on between Scotland and the north of England before such a travel ban was put in place.

Speaking on BBC Scotland’s The Sunday Show, Scottish Government trade minister Ivan McKee said a decision on Covid-19 had to be made quickly. The virus, as we know, moves very fast, decisions are made very fast and those decisions are communicat­ed at a four nations level,” he said.

But Tory leader Douglas Ross, speaking on the same show, said: “We know that law was made on Thursday morning to introduce these restrictio­ns into Greater Manchester and a ban on travel, yet it wasn’t announced until over 24 hours later. “If Ivan McKee says there’s not good enough dialogue between the UK Government and the Scottish Government, there was 24 hours that passed before anyone in Greater Manchester knew of a decision taken a day earlier.”

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 ??  ?? Andy Burnham, mayor of Manchester
Andy Burnham, mayor of Manchester

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