Holidaymakers from the Netherlands face two weeks
quarantine on entering the UK
CoronaSociety August 14, 2020
People travelling from the Netherlands to
Britain will again be required to undergo two weeks quarantine on their
arrival, British transport minister Grant Shapps has announced. The requirement
affects both Dutch tourists and international residents visiting friends and
family, as well as people returning from a visit to the Netherlands. Returning
holidaymakers from France, Malta, Monaco and Aruba will also have to go into
quarantine for 14 days because of the sharp rise in coronavirus cases. ‘We have
got to be absolutely ruthless about this, even with our closest and dearest
friends and partners. I think everybody understands that,’ British prime minister
Boris Johnson said during a visit to Northern Ireland. Holidaymakers returning
to the Netherlands will not have to go into quarantine when they get back, the
foreign ministry said. However, Britain will become a code orange country from
Saturday morning, meaning that all but essential travel should be avoided. As
more and more travel restrictions are introduced, Morocco has halted all
flights to and from the Netherlands, stranding hundreds of holidaymakers. The
cancellations follow the Netherlands’ decision to stop people from Morocco
coming to the Netherlands, because of coronavirus concerns although foreign
office officials told the Volkskrant that the two issues are unrelated. The
spokesman said flights have been halted because a bilateral agreement on direct
flights has now expired and a new agreement has not yet been made. Schiphol
Meanwhile, most people arriving from code orange countries at Schiphol airport
avoided the new testing centre which opened for business on Thursday, the
Volkskrant reported. Three at-risk areas – Aruba, Mexico and New York – were
singled out for testing during the first day. However, by early afternoon, just
over 50 of the 160 passengers who had been approached agreed to undergo the
procedure, the paper said. ‘It is what we expected,’ a local health board
official told the paper. ‘Most people who have just been on a long journey want
to get home, and hopefully will get a test later. But we can’t force them.’
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