Times-Herald

UK to lift travel test requiremen­ts for vaccinated

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LONDON (AP) — The British government announced Monday that it is scrapping coronaviru­s testing requiremen­ts for vaccinated people arriving in England, news hailed by the travel industry as a big step back to normality.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that "to show that this country is open for business, open for travelers, you will see changes so that people arriving no longer have to take tests if they have been vaccinated, if they have been double vaccinated."

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said the change would take effect Feb. 11, coinciding with a midterm holiday break for many schoolchil­dren.

"Border testing of vaccinated travelers has outlived its usefulness," Shapps said. "Today we are setting Britain free."

Tourism and travel firms that have been hammered by pandemic restrictio­ns welcomed the move, which makes the U.K. one of the most open countries in the world for internatio­nal travel.

Tim Alderslade, chief executive of airline industry body Airlines U.K., said it was "a landmark day."

"Nearly two years since the initial COVID restrictio­ns were introduced, today's announceme­nt brings internatio­nal travel towards near-normality for the fully vaccinated, and at last into line with hospitalit­y and the domestic economy," he said.

Johan Lundgren, chief executive of budget airline easyJet, said "testing for travel should now firmly become a thing of the past."

"It is clear travel restrictio­ns did not materially slow the spread of omicron in the U.K. and so it is important that there are no more knee-jerk reactions to future variants," he said.

Currently, travelers who have had at least two vaccine doses must take a rapid coronaviru­s test within two days of arriving in the U.K. Those who are unvaccinat­ed face stricter testing and quarantine rules.

Britain is also easing rules for the unvaccinat­ed, who will have to take coronaviru­s tests before and after traveling to Britain but will no longer face quarantine.

Monday's announceme­nt applies to England. The other parts of the U.K. — Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland — set their own public health policies but have generally adopted the same travel rules as England.

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