EU-based Brits can’t travel home via Eurotunnel,
company warns
One British national based in Belgium says he was
escorted from Eurotunnel on Tuesday evening.
The notification comes as British nationals based in
the EU have been left worried about their travel plans after a British man
living in Belgium said he was barred Tuesday night from traveling through the
Eurotunnel |
BY MARI
ECCLES AND LOUISE GUILLOT
December
29, 2021 8:46 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-based-brits-cant-travel-home-via-eurotunnel-company-warns/
Eurotunnel
is warning British citizens living in the EU that they cannot travel through
France by car to get home from the U.K.
The
notification comes as British nationals based in the EU have been left worried
about their travel plans after a British man living in Belgium said he was
barred Tuesday night from traveling through the Eurotunnel, which connects the
U.K. and France and serves as a main conduit to mainland Europe.
Roland
Moore, who works as a public affairs director in Brussels, wrote in a social
media post that he was escorted from the Eurotunnel.
“I was told
being a Belgian resident ... was no longer a compelling reason for transiting
[France] to go home,” he wrote, despite holding an “M” card, a Belgian
residence document issued to British citizens who qualify as
"beneficiaries" of the Brexit agreement.
In an
“urgent” update on its website, Eurotunnel appeared to confirm on Wednesday
that the French government had changed its rules.
“Following
a French Government decision, on 28/12/2021, unless they hold French residency,
British citizens are now considered 3rd country citizens and can no longer
transit France by road to reach their country of residence in the EU,” the
statement said.
The French
government tightened restrictions on travel from the U.K. on December 18 after
the Omicron coronavirus variant surged in Britain. The country now only allows
travel from the U.K. for what it calls “compelling reasons.”
According
to French travel guidance, “nationals of the European Union or
equivalent," as well as their partners and children, "who have their
main residence in France or who join, in transit through France, their main
residence in a country of the European Union” are considered to have a
compelling reason for traveling from the U.K. through France.
But Moore
said that he was handed a document by French authorities explaining the
decision to ask him to leave the Eurotunnel.
“From now
on, border guards should no longer consider as a compelling reason the fact,
for a British national beneficiary of the [Brexit] withdrawal agreement
residing in a Member State other than France, to transit through France to
regain his domicile,” it said.
Although
the French government hasn't made an official announcement about the rule
change, the document and Eurotunnel statement says the ban does not apply to
British people living in France, or people from the U.K. that also hold an EU
passport through dual nationality. But it does apply to British citizens living
outside France in the EU.
Confusion
reigns
Moore
wrote: “Imagine how I felt. Stranded and deserted last night and escorted off
@LeShuttle property like a criminal.”
The
Eurotunnel links Folkestone in England and Coquelles, near Calais, in France.
Prior to Eurotunnel's announcement, Moore’s case had led to some confusion
among British people based in the EU about the rules.
The French
government's website still appears to suggest that British nationals can travel
via France if they live in the EU. On the “Brits in Brussels” Facebook page,
several people said that they had been able to travel through the Eurotunnel on
Wednesday.
A press
officer for the French Interior Ministry contacted by POLITICO on Wednesday
couldn’t confirm or deny the information and pointed to guidance online.
France’s
ambassador to the U.K., Catherine Colonna, also advised on social media that
British people check the same guidance, responding to queries about Moore’s
case. GetLink, which operates the Channel Tunnel, did not respond to several
requests for comment.
A
spokesperson for rail operator Eurostar said in an email the company doesn’t
believe any new rules would apply to its train links between London and
Brussels. That’s because travel entry rules depend on destination stations,
meaning British and Belgian rules apply.
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