UK reopens travel to 12 nations as tourist hotspots miss out

Bloomberg

Britain will permit relatively open leisure travel to just 12 nations and territories including Portugal as it seeks to restart tourism while keeping control over the coronavirus pandemic.
A legal ban on international leisure trips will be eased from May 17, the Department for Transport confirmed. Return journeys from approved countries will require Covid-19 tests but no period of quarantine.
Also on the “green list” with Portugal and its island provinces of Madeira and the Azores are Israel, Iceland, the Faroes, Singapore, Brunei, New Zealand and Australia, together with the British territories of Gibraltar and the Falklands. There’s
no place for the European holiday hotspots of Spain, Greece and France, and trans-Atlantic trips vital to some airlines remain on hold.
With the relaxation of border controls, the UK has put itself at the leading edge of attempts to return tourism to normal. The resumption of travel will also give an economic boost after the country rolled out vaccinations faster than the European Union following its split from the bloc. Still, the limited reopening drew a mixed response from travel firms and was dismissed as “very disappointing and frankly not worth commenting on” by International Air Transport Association Director General Willie Walsh. “The only route out of this pandemic is a careful, prudent and responsible one,” Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said in a Downing Street briefing. “The reason there aren’t more places on the list is there aren’t more places that are in the fortunate position that the UK has got itself in.”
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is seeking to protect hard-won gains after Britain suffered some of the highest global death rates earlier in the crisis. The list will be revised every three weeks as infection rates change and inoculations gather pace elsewhere.
The reopening of the vacation destinations of Portugal and Madeira will provide some cheer for short-haul airlines and travel firms, though only the latter is fully open right now.
Several other approved destinations also have tight limits on incoming passengers.
British Airways Chief Executive Officer Sean Doyle welcomed the UK plan and said extra flights to Portugal’s Algarve holiday coast had been added by the carrier, while calling for more markets to be reopened before the end of June.
Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd called the development an important step but said the government had been “overly cautious” and that there’s no reason the US shouldn’t be immediately added to the green list. Its concern was echoed by EasyJet Plc and the British Airline Pilots Association.
Under the new “traffic-light” system, destinations seen as having a moderate risk are allocated to an “amber” list, requiring passengers entering Britain to self-isolate for 10 days, while those from high-risk “red” countries must quarantine in a hotel for the same period.

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