The United Kingdom to withdraw all 11 countries from the coronavirus travel red list
All 11 countries on England’s coronavirus travel “red list” will be removed, suggesting that ministers believe that the Omicron form of the virus no longer needs to be contained.
Customers in England were unable to book PCR tests for a few hours on Tuesday, while the website for obtaining rapid lateral flow antigen tests remained unavailable for new reservations.
Following a review of the current risk analysis from the UK Health Security Agency, Health Secretary Sajid Javid told parliament that all 11 nations on the coronavirus travel red list would be withdrawn because the system has become less successful in preventing the incursion of the Omicron variant (UKHSA).
Angola, Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe are now on the red list.
The red list, arrival testing, and self-isolation restrictions for vaccinated travelers will be reviewed again on January 5, 2019.
With community transmission here and similar rates around the world, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps believes it is appropriate to remove the 11 countries from the red list, and that these adjustments are the next logical steps as they continue to combat this variety. They will stay focused on meeting our booster target for all adults by the end of the year, and they will reassess their trip testing policies in the first week of January.
Although Javid’s ruling only applies to England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales often follow suit.
All arrivals must now provide a negative pre-departure PCR or lateral flow test that was taken within 48 hours of arriving, according to new UK travel requirements. The second PCR test, in which both UK citizens and tourists must wait for the results in isolation, is also included. For unvaccinated travelers, the restrictions are different.
The Cabinet Office Minister, Stephen Barclay MP, said in the House of Commons that anyone staying in a quarantined hotel would be permitted to depart early if they tested positive for COVID-19.
The elimination of the red list was welcomed by Gary Lewis, the chief executive of the Travel Network Group, but he said that while they are completely supportive of safe international travel, they must be pragmatic, as Covid is here to stay. There have been far too many ill-timed, impulsive travel restrictions.
The number of confirmed instances of the variation was 4,700 on Monday, according to the UK Health Security Agency, although daily infection counts were expected to be around 200,000.