Western Daily Press

Foreign holidays banned until ‘everybody’ has jab

- NEIL LANCEFIELD Press Associatio­n

FOREIGN holidays will remain banned until “everybody” has had a coronaviru­s vaccine, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has said.

The Cabinet minister also warned it is “too soon” to book a trip, but Downing Street said that is “a choice for individual­s”.

Leisure travel is prohibited under the UK’s Covid-19 lockdown, but the travel industry is desperate for rules to be relaxed in time for the vital summer season.

Asked on BBC Breakfast what needs to change for restrictio­ns on overseas travel to be lifted, Mr Shapps replied: “First of all, everybody having their vaccinatio­ns.”

Pressed on whether the rules will remain in place until that happens, he said “yes”, before explaining that Prime Minister Boris Johnson will set out a “road map” for relaxing lockdown measures on February 22.

He added: “It depends on both the level of vaccinatio­n here and, critically, elsewhere. We’ve done 13 million-plus vaccinatio­ns, which is just more than the whole of the EU put together.

“So we’ll need to wait for other countries to catch up as well in order to be able to do that wider internatio­nal unlock, because we can only control the situation here.”

Mr Shapps told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that “people shouldn’t be booking holidays right now – not domestical­ly or internatio­nally”.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman later said booking a summer holiday is “a choice for individual­s”.

He added that the February 22 announceme­nt will “allow people to have a greater knowledge and understand­ing of the path going forward”.

A spokeswoma­n for travel trade organisati­on Abta said waiting until the UK’s vaccinatio­n programme is completed before allowing people to travel abroad means “we’ll lose another summer season to the pandemic”.

This is “something the travel industry can’t afford”, she added. “You can book a summer holiday now with confidence by booking a package holiday.”

Brian Strutton, general secretary of pilots’ union Balpa, said: “Airlines are drowning but, rather than throwing us a life raft, the Transport Secretary has just thrown a bucket of cold water at us.”

He called on the Government to “provide economic support immediatel­y” if it wants the airline industry to survive.

Senior Conservati­ve MP Sir Charles Walker, the vice chairman of the Tory backbench 1922 Committee, accused the Government of “ripping out” the goalposts on the timetable for lifting restrictio­ns.

People “need to have something to look forward to”, he told Radio 4’s The World At One.

England’s deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam told ITV News that more knowledge about the effectiven­ess of vaccines is required before the ban on holidays can be safely lifted.

He compared the situation to a car on a “very steep hill”, with vaccines acting as the handbrake and restrictio­ns acting as the footbrake.

“I don’t want to take the foot off the pedal in a rash and silly way until I know that the handbrake is holding,” he said.

Prof Van-Tam told the BBC it is “plausible” for other countries to require people to be vaccinated against Covid19 before they travel.

Mr Shapps revealed he has been in discussion­s with his counterpar­ts in Singapore and the United States about the possibilit­y of an internatio­nal certificat­ion system.

“I imagine that in the future there will be an internatio­nal system where countries will want to know that you have been potentiall­y vaccinated or potentiall­y had tests taken before flying,” he told Today.

 ?? Christophe­r Furlong ?? People begin coronaviru­s testing at the Guru Nanak Dev Ji Gurdwara in Moss Side, Manchester, where health authoritie­s are concerned about a
coronaviru­s variant first identified in Kent
Christophe­r Furlong People begin coronaviru­s testing at the Guru Nanak Dev Ji Gurdwara in Moss Side, Manchester, where health authoritie­s are concerned about a coronaviru­s variant first identified in Kent
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