Britain slapped with coronavirus travel bans due to new strain of virus
LONDON : Countries scrambled to ban entry from the UK on Sunday after health authorities in Britain reported of a new highly infectious coronavirus strain that is “out of control”.
But there was positive news across the Atlantic where US lawmakers reached a deal for a nearly $900 billion COVID-19 financial package to help struggling Americans.
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson was to chair the COBR emergencies committee on Monday, his office said, after a slew of nations from Turkey to Canada blocked arrivals from Britain by air.
Crucial transit country France moved to block people and goods crossing the Channel, while the Netherlands said passengers arriving by ferry would be denied entry.
The emergency committee would “discuss the situation regarding international travel, in particular the steady flow of freight into and out of the UK,” a spokesman said.
Read more: Saudi Arabia bans international flights amid new coronavirus strain threats
The ban on all but unaccompanied freight crossing to France comes as companies scramble to shift merchandise with days to go until Britain finally quits European Union trade structures in the wake of Brexit.
Late Sunday, Britain’s critical south coast port at Dover said it was closing to all accompanied freight and passengers due to the French border restrictions “until further notice”.
Alarm bells were ringing across Europe — which last week became the first region in the world to pass 500,000 deaths from COVID-19 since the pandemic broke out a year ago — as the new, even more infectious strain of the virus appeared to be raging in parts of Britain.
A WHO spokeswoman told that “across Europe, where transmission is intense and widespread, countries need to redouble their control and prevention approaches.”
A German government source said restrictions on air travel from Britain could be adopted by the entire 27-member EU and that countries were also discussing a joint response over sea, road and rail links.
French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and EU chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel held a conference call on Sunday about the matter, Macron’s office said.
Later Sunday, bans on flights from Britain were being implemented in the Americas, including by Canada, Chile and Argentina.
US officials however signalled they were holding off on the move for now.
Despite growing concerns about the new strain, EU experts believe it will not impact the effectiveness of existing vaccines, Germany’s health minister Jens Spahn said.
The assessment was shared by Britain’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty.
UK U-turn
Johnson said the infectiousness of the new strain had forced him into locking down much of England over the Christmas period.
“Unfortunately the new strain was out of control. We have got to get it under control,” UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock told Sky News after Johnson abandoned plans to ease containment measures over the festive season.
Scientists first discovered the new variant — which they believe is 70% more transmissible — in a patient in September. And Public Health England notified the government on Friday when modelling revealed its full seriousness.
The novel coronavirus has killed more than 1.68 million people since the outbreak emerged in China last December.
And with the onset of colder winter weather in the northern hemisphere, when respiratory diseases flourish, countries are bracing for new waves of COVID-19 with tighter restrictions, despite the economic damage such lockdowns wrought earlier this year.
The Netherlands is under a five-week lockdown until mid-January with schools and all non-essential shops closed.
Italy also announced a new regime of restrictions until January 6 that included limits on people leaving their homes more than once a day, closing non-essential shops, bars and restaurants and curbs on regional travel.
Vaccination rollout
In the US, the $900 billion package agreed on Sunday is expected to include aid for vaccine distribution and logistics, extra jobless benefits of $300 per week, and a new round of $600 stimulus checks.
Congress is expected to soon approve the measure as the country copes with the world’s highest death toll from the virus.
“With the horrifying acceleration of daily infections and deaths, there is no time to waste,” Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer said in a joint statement.
Around the world, the rapid rollout of vaccinations is now seen as the only effective way to end the crisis and the economically devastating shutdowns used to halt its spread.
Europe is expected to start a massive vaccination campaign after Christmas following the United States and Britain, which have begun giving jabs with an approved Pfizer-BioNTech shot, one of several leading candidates.
A US expert panel recommended Sunday that those aged 75 and older should be the next vaccinated against the virus, along with 30 million “frontline essential workers,” including teachers, grocery store employees and police.
Initial doses have focused on frontline health-care workers and the elderly in nursing homes.
Russia and China have also started giving out jabs with their own domestically produced vaccines.
Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he would receive the vaccine publicly when his age group’s turn comes.
And Algeria’s President Abdelmajid Tebboune said the country would launch vaccinations in January — although the North African nation has yet to pick which of the shots on offer it will deploy.
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