Holiday blow as quarantine hotels ‘likely’ – fear of ’immense damage’ for travel

Boris Johnson is set to introduce a new rule for arrivals into the UK coming from “high risk” destinations. In a bid to curb the spread of new coronavirus variants, the Prime Minister is expected to announce a new rule which dictates all arrivals into the UK must spend their 10 days of mandatory quarantine in a hotel at their own expense.

The move thought to be a push towards ensuring all arrivals stick to the self-isolation rules, and can easily be checked up on.

According to BBC News, the rule is “likely to be brought in and “will apply at the very least to foreigners, maybe everyone.”

However, travel insiders say the move could be “hugely damaging” to the aviation and tourism sector, as well as the UK economy overall.

“If the Government put in hotel quarantine for everybody coming into the UK it would snuff out recovery in the aviation and travel sector,” Paul Charles, CEO of the PC Agency, told Sky News.

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Similarly, travel expert Simon Calder pointed out: “Clearly nobody is going to go on holiday if they have to quarantine for two weeks, hardly anyone goes on holiday if they have to quarantine for two weeks on their return anyway and that is almost certainly not going to happen if they are going to have to go into a hotel to quarantine.”

So far, no major names in the hotel world have come forward to say they have been contacted by the Government to take part in the new policy.

If ministers agree on the new quarantine rule, they will have to decide whether it will apply just to foreign nationals, or whether they will also enforce the rule for UK residents.

Some Government ministers have suggested even the new rules don’t go far enough and recommend even tighter restrictions be brought in.

Speaking on Sky News, Tom Tugenhadt, chair of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, said: “It wouldn’t be unwise for us to look very hard at our borders and to really consider if now is the time to make sure we control access and restrain any spread.”

This means Britons arriving from all destinations, regardless of their coronavirus case rates, must self-isolate for ten days upon arrival.

People coming to the UK from overseas must also take a coronavirus test within 72 hours of travel.

A negative test must be presented before they are granted entry.

source: express.co.uk