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Countries banning UK flights grow, Latin America joins EU, Canada

 

 

Countries banning UK flights grow, Latin America joins EU, Canada - Photo/Image

 

 

 

 

Argentina, Chile and Colombia have joined EU countries and Canada banning flights from UK due to concerns over a new, highly contagious variant of the COVID-19.

Argentina will “suspend arrivals and departures to and from Britain as a precaution from tomorrow (today),” the interior ministry in Buenos Aires wrote in a statement Sunday evening.

A single flight from Britain expected for Monday morning has been allowed to land at Buenos Aires International Airport.

Passengers and crew will be kept in quarantine for seven days.

The Colombian government also decided on Sunday to no longer allow flights to and from Britain from Monday, President Ivan Duque wrote on Twitter.

Accordingly, passengers who have arrived in the past eight days must be quarantined.

According to a statement, the Chilean government decided to suspend direct flights to and from Britain from Tuesday.

Foreigners who do not have permanent residence in Chile and have been in Britain in the past two weeks are also not allowed to enter.

Chileans and foreigners who have a permanent residence must be in a 14-day quarantine.

In the EU, the Netherlands was the first on Sunday to announce an immediate ban on flights.

Similar advisories emerged from Belgium, Austria, France, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Bulgaria, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, and Sweden.

Ireland will institute a 48-hour flight ban to Britain while ferries will be limited to freight travel.

Outside of Europe, the Canadian government also announced it would ban flights from Britain for 72 hours starting on Monday.

Germany banned nearly all flights from Britain starting from midnight, with a few exceptions, including cargo planes.

The German Interior Ministry also ordered the police to immediately begin checking passengers from Britain.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called a meeting of civil contingencies committee on Monday in response to the flight bans, Downing Street said, according to the British Press Association.

The new strain is “out of control,” British Health Secretary Matt Hancock told BBC News on Sunday.

The recently discovered variant is up to 70 per cent more contagious than the previously known form, but there was no evidence it was more deadly.

Individual cases of the variant have apparently already been found in other EU countries.

Health authorities in both the Netherlands and Italy reported that a virus with the variant described in Britain has been identified in their countries in the past few weeks.

The Dutch public health institute RIVM said the variant was identified in a random sample in the Netherlands in early December, and that further investigation was planned.

Italy’s health ministry said that a patient and their partner who returned from Britain by plane a few days ago were found to have the variant.

They arrived in Rome’s international airport and are both in isolation, the ministry stated.

Virologist Christian Drosten, who has become a household name in Germany for his role as a government COVID-19 adviser, said the strain had yet to be seen in Germany.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) has advised health authorities and laboratories in Europe to analyse and sequence virus samples to detect its potential spread.

It also urged the testing, isolation, and follow-up of anyone linked to cases.

Any cases should be reported through the EU’s early warning and response system, the agency said.

Experts widely agreed that vaccines would be effective against the variant.

“I don’t see any reason for alarm at the moment,” said Richard Neher from the Biozentrum of the University of Basel.

Andreas Bergthaler from the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna does not consider the current development to be “incredibly alarming” either, noting it is not uncommon for mutations to appear among pathogens.

To curtail the spread, Britain announced a new lockdown for London and parts of south and eastern England starting Sunday and over the Christmas period.

The measures affect 16 million people.

With some exceptions, in the hardest-hit areas, households are not allowed to mix, people may not stay overnight away from home and all non-essential shops are closed.

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke with top European Union leaders by phone on Sunday to iron out a joint approach.

Germany, which currently holds the rotating EU presidency, has called representatives of other member states for an emergency meeting on Monday over the new coronavirus variant.

The European Commission is in contact with the member states to increase the flow of information and help with coordination, a source in the executive branch told dpa.

But Britain’s alarm late Saturday prompted countries in the European Union to take their own actions on Sunday, ordering travel restrictions to prevent the variant from spreading.

The Dutch flight ban is set to last until Jan. 1, while Belgium’s suspension affects all flights and trains – including the important Eurostar route – and kicks in at midnight (2300 GMT).

France has imposed a ban on travel from Britain by land, sea, rail, and air that will initially last 48 hours.

Only unaccompanied cargo is allowed, according to the French prime minister’s office.

Meanwhile, Britain’s important Port of Dover has banned all outgoing freight for 48 hours.

Freight from coming to Britain from France will be allowed, but there are fears lorry drivers will not travel to avoid being stuck in the country, the BBC reported.

The last train from Britain through the tunnel to France departed London on Sunday evening, according to operator Getlink.  (AFP)

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