Hope for holidaymakers as govt looks at travel corridor to Spanish islands

Business

Holidaymakers in Spain have been given hope after the UK government revealed it is considering setting up regional travel corridors to let those travelling from low-risk areas escape quarantine.

Transport minister Baroness Vere of Norbiton confirmed the idea was being investigated after pressure from Madrid over the change to travel advice made by the government over the weekend.

She told parliament on Tuesday: “For the time being, we are taking the approach by country for border measures but it is the case that it could be that we put them in place for regions in the future.

“We are not there yet but we are certainly looking at it because it is an appropriate consideration.”

Local government minister Simon Clarke earlier defended the government’s decision to warn against all non-essential travel to Spain and the Balearic and Canary islands.

“We saw a 75% increase in cases on Thursday and Friday relative to Tuesday and Wednesday last week – that’s what has prompted this intervention,” he told Sky News on Tuesday.

“We are living in a world where things can move suddenly and very seriously, and that’s what appears to be happening in parts of Spain.

More from UK

“We have to therefore make a decision as a government over what is best to make the UK safe.”

Terminal 5 at Heathrow airport
Image:
Passengers arriving at Heathrow’s Terminal 5 after the announcement that Spain had been added to the UK’s quarantine list

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Monday that his country is in talks with UK authorities to make them reconsider the decision to impose quarantine measures.

Mr Sanchez pointed out that the upsurge in Spain’s coronavirus cases is focused in two regions, Catalonia and Aragon.

He added: “In most of Spain, the incidence is very much inferior to even the numbers registered in the United Kingdom.”



quarantine change







Angry tourists vent over quarantine

The Spanish government wants the UK to exempt travellers to the Balearic and Canary islands from the newly-announced two-week quarantine.

Labour’s shadow transport secretary Jim McMahon told Sky News: “We’ve seen in the UK where individual cities and towns have had different interventions… because it recognises where you have a localised spike, that’s where you have to concentrate efforts and make sure the infection doesn’t spread.

“Now obviously that’s more difficult when people are going from one country to another, and how you manage that is always going to be a challenge. But what we were led to believe is that the government would take a more localised approach.

“So for instance, if there was a particular spike in a resort, a town, a city or a region – the government would have an agreement with a country to make sure we could isolate that, but also to make sure we could have pre-testing before people come back to the UK.”

He added: “But we haven’t seen that, we’ve seen a very blunt tool if you like, again, where the government has imposed restrictions on the whole of Spain including the islands.”

Es Carregador Beach in Calvia, on the Spanish island of Mallorca, earlier this month
Image:
Beachgoers are seen on the Spanish island of Mallorca earlier this month

Daniel Trigg, chairman of the Lanzarote Business and Residents’ Association, said he was caught off-guard by the UK government’s decision to apply a blanket rule across all of Spain and its islands.

He added that Lanzarote, in the Canary Islands, currently has just one case of coronavirus.

Mr Trigg said: “It came out of nowhere. We do not understand how the Canary Islands can be included.

“We’ve complied with everything and just do not understand why we’re all put in the same category as mainland Spain.”

Mr Trigg urged the British government to reconsider the decision due to Lanzarote’s reliance on tourism for income and its precarious outlook for jobs.

He added: “Thousands of people will be put out of work and will never recover. Some businesses will just not last this.

“You’re (the UK government) going to wipe out a lot of business and a lot of hard working families, including a lot of self-employed people in the tourism sector.”

Meanwhile tour operator Jet2 has suspended flights and holidays to Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, Lanzarote, Majorca, Menorca and Ibiza up to and including August 9.

Spain’s tourism minister Reyes Maroto insisted it was safe for holidaymakers to visit the popular destinations.

She said: “We’ve been talking all weekend. What we’d like is for quarantines to be lifted on the islands as early as possible and we hope it will be today rather than tomorrow.”

Spain’s tourism association – known as CEHAT – has offered to pay for tourists to take coronavirus tests and called the quarantine decision “illogical” and “unfair”.



raab on ridge 26 july







Spain quarantine: UK acted ‘swiftly’

:: Listen to the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told Sky News that the government received data on Friday which showed a “big jump” in COVID-19 cases across Spain.

The quarantine affects Britons coming back from mainland Spain, the Canary Islands (Tenerife, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, La Palma, La Gomera, El Hierro and La Graciosa) and the Balearic Islands (Majorca, Menorca, Ibiza, and Formentera).

The Scottish government lifted its quarantine rules on Spain this week but will now reimpose them, with Northern Ireland and Wales also following suit.

Have you been affected by Spain being added to the UK’s quarantine list?

:: WhatsApp – 07583 000853
:: Email – news@sky.com
:: ‘Your Report’ on Sky News apps

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Who is the food critic replacing Gregg Wallace on Celebrity MasterChef?
Prince Andrew will not join Royal Family for Christmas after Chinese ‘spy’ named
Fearne Cotton shares update after getting tumours removed
New Study Challenges Planet Formation Models with PDS 70b’s Chemical Mystery
Luigi Mangione extradited to New York where he faces new federal charges

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *