Travel industry bosses demand answers as it emerges TWELVE air bridges have been agreed

Travel industry bosses demand more answers as it emerges just TWELVE air bridges have been agreed with other countries despite list of 95 destinations being published today – with no guarantee that Brits will be allowed in

  • Travel industry bosses are demanding more answers from ministers today
  • Just 12 air bridges have been agreed by UK Government with other countries 
  • Boris Johnson is set to announce Britons can travel to the majority of the EU
  • Other permitted destinations will include all British overseas territories and other long-haul destinations like Australia, New Zealand, Thailand and Sri Lanka
  • However, only a handful of the 95 countries will allow entries from the UK 

Travel industry bosses are demanding more answers from ministers as it emerges just 12 air bridges have been agreed with other countries. 

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to give UK citizens a green light today to travel abroad to 95 countries, in a move that signals the end of the Government’s blanket quarantine policy on arrivals to the UK.  

However, only a dozen are expected to allow Britons to enter, as many countries are wary over allowing tourists from the UK into their countries after spikes in coronavirus cases have been seen in the likes of Leicester.  

Today, George Morgan-Grenville, chief executive of luxury travel company Red Savannah, called the Government’s policy ‘a disaster’.

He told the BBC’s Radio 4 Today programme: ‘The whole of quarantine has been a disaster. It was a lousy piece of secondary legislation. 

‘There was no business or regulatory impact assessment carried out, there was no consultation carried out. And effectively what it did was to prevent the industry after four months of no sales from getting back on its feet again.

‘The Government are very fond of saying that they’ve been following the science, but the scientists aren’t quite as fond as saying they’ve been following the Government.

‘There were numerous scientists…  saying the exact opposite, saying it would have a negligible impact on public health and that it was a very odd time to bring it in.’

Theresa Villiers, the former environment and Northern Ireland secretary, who was transport minister in the coalition, said the quarantine policy ‘hasn’t been worth it’. 

Pictured: Passengers queue up to check in for flights at Stansted Airport London, Britain, 01 July 2020. The UK government is set to announce that Britons can travel to 95 countries, but only a handful actually permit people travelling from the UK

‘This policy has caused damage to the travel industry, and inconvenience for holiday-makers, without any evidence of it working effectively to cut Covid risk,’ she said. 

Having been one of the MPs urging Home Secretary Priti Patel to delay the restrictions when they were introduced a month ago, she added: ‘Air bridges needed to be in place from the start to deliver a risk-based approach which imposed quarantine only on flights from places with high rates of infection.’

The PM is expected to announced that Britons will be free to travel to the majority European Union, all British overseas territories and a number of other long-haul destinations – including Australia, New Zealand, Thailand and Sri Lanka. 

Quarantine restrictions on arrivals into the UK were imposed on June 8 – which includes returning UK citizens – and put an end to the hope of holidays abroad. 

However, it was announced last week that measures would be relaxed for people returning from ‘safe’ countries from July 6.

The government has been working on a traffic light system based on coronavirus risks in other countries, and plans on permitting travel to both ‘green’ and ‘amber’ countries.

But Greece’s announcement it was extending its ban on flights from the UK caught the UK government – who were set to release the list on Monday – by surprise.

Pictured: Tourists arrive at Nikos Kazatzakis International Airport in Crete, Greece, on Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The passengers - most of them from Germany - came from Hamburg on the first international flight to arrive in the island

Pictured: Tourists arrive at Nikos Kazatzakis International Airport in Crete, Greece, on Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The passengers – most of them from Germany – came from Hamburg on the first international flight to arrive in the island

The country opened to tourists for the first time since lockdown yesterday, but said visitors for the UK would have to wait until at least July 15.

According to The Times, other counties have since raised the alarm over the proposed air bridge agreements with the UK following the outbreak of Covid-19 cases in Leicester.

The government has been criticised by figures in the travel sector for not revealing the full details of its relaxation of the measures, saying that it is preventing people from booking holidays with confidence.