FILE PHOTO: Arriving passengers queue at UK Border Control at the Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport in London, Britain June 29, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah Mckay/File Photo
August 2, 2021
By Ben Makori
LONDON (Reuters) -Families and friends were overjoyed at London’s Heathrow Airport on Monday after a travel rule change meant they could reunite after 18 months of pandemic separation.
“Very, very excited. It means the world,” said Sue Blake, as she waited to greet her son, daughter-in-law and grandson who had flown in from New York and who she last saw two years ago.
“It’s a big chunk of his life and I’m so thrilled for him that he can come here,” she said of the eight-year-old.
Watching the hugs and tears in the arrivals hall, Heathrow’s boss urged Britain to remove barriers to travel, not add to them, amid speculation that the government was poised to impose more rules.
“Let’s just make it easier now for people to travel,” Heathrow’s chief executive John Holland-Kaye told Reuters.
Britain, where the death toll from the coronavirus pandemic has nearly reached 130,000, reopened its borders to large parts of the world on Monday, scrapping quarantine for fully vaccinated arrivals from the European Union, excluding France, and the United States.
The move was welcomed by families divided by the pandemic and airlines strained by it.
“It is really awesome,” said 31-year-old medical writer Colleen Castro after collecting her luggage.
She and her husband had come to London to deliver some happy news to his parents.
“It’s been a really long time and, actually, I’m pregnant with my in-law’s first grandchild, so it’s really exciting to finally be able to be here and share that news with them.”
But just as families, friends and business travellers arrived at British airports like London Heathrow, the travel industry faced a new headache over potential COVID-19 warnings against holidays to Spain.
“We just need to keep things simple. We need to build confidence in travel,” Holland-Kaye said when asked about the reports of another rule change.
Britain has one of the fastest vaccination programmes in the world but the government has prevented the travel industry from bouncing back because of its maze of rules and track record for making last-minute changes.
In the latest twist, The Times reported on Monday the government planned to warn holidaymakers against visiting Spain, Britain’s most popular holiday destination, because of concerns about COVID-19 there.
Spain could go on a new category of risk – the “amber watchlist” – meaning it could be upgraded to “red” at short notice, with arrivals having to quarantine in hotels.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and Ben Makori; Writing by Sarah Young, Editing by Kate Holton and Angus MacSwan)
Source: One America News Network