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England has added ten southern African countries to their red list and will require all arrivals to do a day 2 PCR test and self-isolate until they have got a negative result.
The return of the red list comes after the B.1.1.529 COVID-19 variant, also known as ‘Omicron’, was detected in South Africa and Botswana.
Travellers arriving from South Africa are now required to quarantine on arrival in the UK, along with arrivals from nine other southern African nations.
The World Health Organization has classified the new Omicron strain as a ‘variant of concern.’
Arrivals from red list countries now have to go straight into quarantine in government-mandated hotels. This costs around €3,000 per person, for a 10-day stay.
The countries added to the red list are:
- South Africa
- Namibia
- Zimbabwe
- Botswana
- Lesotho
- Eswatini
- Malawi
- Mozambique
-
Zambia
-
Angola
Travel will not be banned altogether but day 2 PCR tests will be required
At a press conference on Saturday evening, UK Prime Minster Boris Johnson said, “This variant is spreading around the world, with two cases so far identified here in the UK.
There is also a very extensive mutation which means it diverges quite significantly from previous configurations of the virus, and as result, it might – at least in part – reduce the protection of our vaccines over time. So we need to take targeted and proportionate measures now as a precaution while we find out more.”
He went on to say, “We are not going to stop people travelling, I want to stress that, we’re not going to stop people travelling, but we will require anyone who enters the UK to take a PCR test by the end of the second day after their arrival, and to self-isolate until they have a negative result.”
Up until now, antigen tests have been accepted. It is not yet clear what you should do if you already have day 2 antigen tests booked.
Some approved providers are now offering to upgrade outstanding antigen tests. This would allow you to use your existing passenger locator number for a day 2 PCR test so it is worth checking with your provider if this is possible.
When do these changes come into effect?
All travellers arriving into England from 4am on Tuesday 30th November are required to take a PCR test on or before day 2, and self isolate until they have received a negative result.
Full details on how to get a test and when it must be booked are available here.
The most worrying variant yet
Experts have said that the B.1.1.529 variant could be the most lethal and worrying yet. This is because of its “awful spike mutation profile”, which scientists fear could help it evade immunity. Early reports suggest it is capable of reducing vaccine efficiency to just 30 per cent.
There are currently reported cases of the variant in the UK, The Netherlands, Germany, South Africa, Hong Kong and Botswana.
It’s believed that officials will now be hoping to track down hundreds of people who have arrived in the UK from South Africa over the past week, in an attempt to avoid introducing the new strain.
More than 500 passengers arrive in the UK from South Africa every day.
Non-UK and Irish residents are not allowed to enter England if they have been in any of the red list countries in the past 10 days.
Anyone who has returned in the last 10 days from red list countries is going to be asked to take a PCR test by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA).
Britain has been among the countries hardest hit by COVID-19, with 144,000 deaths since the start of the pandemic.
The number of cases remains high – more than 47,000 in the past 24 hours on Thursday – but more than 80 per cent of people aged 12 and over have received a double injection of the vaccine, and almost 30 per cent have had a third dose.
The UK government has been widely criticized for being slow to tighten travel restrictions at the start of the pandemic, when it kept its borders open as infection rates skyrocketed.
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