Will France be put on the red list? Families fear holidays will be cancelled at the last minute
Will France be put on the red list? Families set to cross the Channel fear their holidays will be cancelled at the last minute – as misery looms for 500,000 Britons already there who face exorbitant hotel quarantine
- The plan is being pushed by influential No10 advisers led by Jonathan Van-Tam
- Fear South African variant spreading in France could evolve to evade vaccines
- Threat comes as thousands of devastated families cancelled their holiday plans
Ministers are considering placing France on the ‘red list’ of countries – a move that would bring chaos and misery for 500,000 Britons estimated to be holidaying in the country this weekend.
The plan is being pushed by influential No 10 advisers – led by Jonathan Van-Tam, Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England – who fear the South African, or Beta, variant that is spreading in the country could evolve to evade vaccines.
The move would theoretically force returning travellers to pay £1,750 for ten days of quarantine in a hotel on their return.
The threat comes as thousands of devastated families cancelled their holiday plans yesterday after Ministers announced that double-jabbed Britons will still have to quarantine on their return from France after ‘Freedom Day’ tomorrow.
There was fury after it emerged late on Friday that France would be excluded from plans to lift quarantine rules for countries on the amber travel list.
Ministers are considering placing France on the ‘red list’ of countries – a move that would bring chaos and misery for 500,000 Britons estimated to be holidaying in the country this weekend. Above: British holidaymakers in Majorca seeking to get home before the quarantine deadline of 4pm Monday
But The Mail on Sunday has learned senior scientific and medical advisers want Ministers to go further and move France to red.
The suggestion was first raised at a top-level meeting at No 10 on Tuesday and was still being considered last night.
Ministers were presented with data that the South African variant is spreading rapidly in France and accounted for one in ten of all new infections.
There were also alarming warnings from some scientists that the AstraZeneca vaccine is less effective in protecting against the South African variant than other strains of the virus.
Despite the threat of the variant, thousands of anti-vaccine protesters mobbed Paris yesterday.
Only 1,073 Beta cases have been confirmed in the UK so far, compared with 216,249 cases of the Indian – or Delta – variant which took hold earlier this year.
A Government source last night said: ‘If the Beta variant continues to spread it [France] will have to go red. We can’t have it taking hold over here.’
The plan is being pushed by influential No 10 advisers – led by Jonathan Van-Tam, Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England – who fear the South African, or Beta, variant that is spreading in the country could evolve to evade vaccines. Above: Despite the threat of the South African variant, thousands of anti-vaccine protesters mobbed Paris yesterday
Earlier, Professor John Edmunds, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE), told the BBC: ‘There is some good evidence from South Africa that it [the Beta variant] can evade the immune response generated by the AstraZeneca vaccine more efficiently.’
But many, such as French MEP Véronique Trillet-Lenoir, say the UK’s mandatory quarantine policy is based on a misinterpretation of health data.
She told Radio 4’s Today programme that the Beta variant is ‘not present at all’ in mainland France – experts say its incidence is estimated to be at just 3.5 per cent and falling – with the country’s cases mainly being found in overseas territories such as the island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean.
Also, the European Centre for Disease Control says the variant is more common in Spain and Greece.
Moving France to the red list would effectively destroy the summer holiday plans for millions of Britons and inflict further pain on the beleaguered tour operators.
The cost for one adult in a quarantine hotel is £1,750, with any subsequent adult or child over the age of 12 charged another £650.
The cost for children aged five to 11 is £325. There would also be a lack of accommodation as there are understood to be only about 20,000 hotel rooms available.
France is the UK’s second most popular holiday destination with more than nine million visitors in 2019.
It is also the most popular country for British second homeowners. There would also be logistical and diplomatic issues if France was added to the red list.
The UK is reliant on France for food and medical supplies and the sheer number of entry points via air, road and sea would create challenges.
Travel expert Gemma Antrobus, of the Association of Independent Tour Operators, said: ‘The ability to put in hotel quarantines at those points or arrange logistics around them is possibly the reason why it didn’t hit red straight away.’
Holidaymakers and tour operators reacted with fury to the 11th hour change of travel rules to France – while eyebrows were raised across the Channel given the contrast in case numbers. In the seven days to July 14, there were 244,691 Covid-19 cases in the UK, compared with 27,713 in France.
The French government announced yesterday that it will require people arriving from the UK who are not double vaccinated to show a negative Covid-19 test taken within the previous 24 hours.
Previously, UK arrivals had been allowed to show a negative test taken within the last 48 hours.
An estimated 500,000 Britons are either in France or due to travel to, or through, the country within the next few days.
John Keefe, from Eurotunnel, which runs the Shuttle operation for cars between Folkestone and Calais, said: ‘This will ruin summer for many people. It is disappointing that the Government has cancelled the option of quarantine-free travel for double-vaccinated parents and their families so close to the school holidays and so soon after they had confirmed that travel to France was safe.’
Willie Walsh, director-general of the International Air Transport Association, said: ‘The Government is making life impossible for people who are desperate to see friends and family.
‘They promised freedom on the back of a successful vaccine programme and now pull the rug out from people at the 11th hour.’
From tomorrow, motorists passing through France in transit to the UK from Belgium, Germany or elsewhere will be regarded as arriving from France – and subject to quarantine when they reach Britain.
Eurostar rail passengers from Brussels, Rotterdam and Amsterdam to London St Pancras will be unaffected because the train passes through France without stopping.
Stephen Gee, who runs a chalet business in the French Alps, had extended his holiday because he thought he would escape having to quarantine if he came back tomorrow.
Instead he found himself having to rush back yesterday.
He said: ‘To change the rules on a Friday evening when no one has a chance to change anything very quickly for something happening on Monday is unbelievable.’
While travel firms can legally say they are still able to offer the holiday as booked and the fact that travellers must self-isolate is not their problem, in reality most airlines, ferry firms and tour operators are likely to offer flexibility with the chance to postpone the trip. Few will offer full refunds.
The Foreign Office does not warn against travel to France, meaning standard travel insurance policies will still be valid but it is unlikely that insurers will pay out for the additional costs such as extra tests and lost wages.
The summer holiday plans of thousands lie in ruins this morning, with people cancelling their planned trips to the Balearic Islands after they were axed from the green list while the cost of flights back from Ibiza, Majorca and Menorca soared nine-fold after last night’s announcement
England players hit by strict Mykonos curfew
Michael Powell for the Mail on Sunday
Even England’s Euro football heroes have found their holiday plans thrown into chaos after officials in Mykonos yesterday imposed a curfew and banned music in restaurants and bars.
Officials have ordered everyone on the Greek island to stay indoors between 1am and 6am after cases quadrupled to more than 300 in the past week alone.
Organisers of private parties of more than 20 people risk fines of up to 200,000 euros (£171,000) if they breach the rules.
The crackdown comes as several members of the team flew out there after England’s defeat to Italy in the final last Sunday.
Even England’s Euro football heroes have found their holiday plans thrown into chaos after officials in Mykonos yesterday imposed a curfew and banned music in restaurants and bars. Defender Kyle Walker this weekend was seen in a video waving his T-shirt over his head
Defender Kyle Walker this weekend was seen in a video waving his T-shirt over his head and singing along to Neil Diamond’s Sweet Caroline, the 1969 hit that became the unofficial anthem of Euro 2020.
The England team memorably joined fans at Wembley in a rendition of the song following their victory over Denmark in the semi-final of the competition.
Walker was joined in the sing-a-long by midfielders Mason Mount and Declan Rice and full-back Luke Shaw.
Other members of the squad, including Jack Grealish, Kalvin Phillips, Ben Chilwell and Ben White are also holidaying on Mykonos.
Among the other celebrities seen on the island in recent days are model Delilah Hamlin, reality star Amber Turner, actress Demi Moore and singer Nicole Scherzinger.