UK coronavirus live: holidaymakers’ plans in disarray after Spain quarantine imposed

Growing concern more travel plans could be thrown into chaos in coming weeks with sudden changes to restrictions





Quarantine for travellers from Spain is blunt tool, says LabourUK could impose more ‘handbrake restrictions’ on arrivals beyond SpainUK-Spain flights and holidays: what are your rights?Earlier lockdown ‘would have saved lives of London bus drivers’Coronavirus: latest global updates



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British tourists return home from the Spanish island of Tenerife as quarantine for people arriving from the country is imposed in the UK.  British tourists return home from the Spanish island of Tenerife as quarantine for people arriving from the country is imposed in the UK. Photograph: Ramon de la Rocha/EPA



Andrew Sparrow (now) and Ben Quinn (earlier)





Mon 27 Jul 2020 12.25 BSTFirst published on Mon 27 Jul 2020 07.27 BST





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44m ago Spain suggests talks with UK might lead to Canary and Balearic islands being excluded from quarantine rule1h ago Earlier lockdown would have saved lives of London bus drivers, says report1h ago Quarantine U-turn for Spain ‘hammer blow’ for travel and tourism industries, says BCC1h ago London mayor urges government not to start scaling back furlough scheme from August4h ago Ryanair has no plans to reduce flights to and from Spain4h ago Airline stocks plunge on fears of more UK travel restrictions4h ago Quarantine re-imposed because cases rising ‘very, very quickly in Spain’, says minister



24m ago12:19





More than a quarter of black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) NHS staff are still waiting for a risk assessment for Covid-19, data suggests. Figures seen by the Health Service Journal (HSJ) suggest 73% of BAME staff had had a risk assessment in England by 17 July, but in some hospital trusts the figure was just 20%. As PA Media reports, NHS England recommended risk assessments for BAME staff as long ago as April and has now extended the deadline for them to be completed to the end of July.





Updated at 12.25pm BSTFacebookTwitte





44m ago11:59





Spain suggests talks with UK might lead to Canary and Balearic islands being excluded from quarantine rule



Sam Jones





The Spanish government is hoping that continuing negotiations with the British government will soon pave the way for Britons to visit the Canary and Balearic islands without having to self-quarantine on their return.





At the moment, the UK government is advising against all non-essential travel to mainland Spain, but the Canaries and Balearics are exempt from the de facto travel ban. However, anyone visiting any part of Spain – including the islands – is currently required to self-isolate for a fortnight when they return to the UK.





“There have been conversations since the weekend with the British authorities about dropping quarantine for those visiting the islands as soon as possible,” Spain’s tourism minister, Reyes Maroto, said on Monday.





Maroto also said the government was providing the UK with epidemiological updates about each of Spain’s 17 regions, adding that six of them were currently in a better epidemiological situation than the UK.





“We’ll be talking to all the Spanish regions to see what they propose, and any proposals will be brought to the British authorities,” she added.





The autonomous governments of Andalucía and Valencia have already asked for their regions to be included in the talks on lifting quarantine restrictions.





Maroto said Spain was trying to be as open and transparent as possible when it came to sharing information. She went on:





We want to use that information to bring confidence and transparency when it comes to taking decisions.





Our opposite numbers around Europe are doing the same thing and keeping us informed about the outbreaks, which are happening across all European countries and not just in Spain.





We’re living alongside the virus but that doesn’t mean we can’t travel or enjoy some well-deserved holidays. But we need to be prudent and we need to respect the virus. But that doesn’t mean we can’t control it and enjoy a certain kind of daily life when living alongside it.





Reyes Maroto, the Spanish tourism minister. Reyes Maroto, the Spanish tourism minister. Photograph: Juanjo Martin/EPA



Updated at 12.02pm BSTFacebookTwitter





1h ago11:42





Earlier lockdown would have saved lives of London bus drivers, says report



Imposing an earlier lockdown in England would have saved lives, according to a report into the high death rate of London bus drivers in the pandemic by a leading expert on health and social inequalities. As my colleague Sarah Boseley reports, male London bus drivers aged 20 to 65 were 3.5 times more likely to die from Covid-19 between March and May than men in other occupations across England and Wales, says Sir Michael Marmot. Sarah’s full story is here.





Earlier lockdown would have saved lives of London bus drivers, says report



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1h ago11:40





Cancer Research UK has welcomed the government proposal to ban unhealthy food being advertised on TV before 9pm as part of its obesity strategy.





Cancer Research UK(@CR_UK)

The UK Government has committed to introduce a 9pm watershed for junk food advertising, encouraging brands who’ve been advertising unhealthy food and drink before 9pm to promote a healthier product from their range instead. (1/2) pic.twitter.com/7FoIfmdpAsJuly 27, 2020





Cancer Research UK(@CR_UK)

This is a huge landmark for the nation’s health, as we know that being overweight or obese puts people at risk of many different diseases – including 13 different types of cancer – and disproportionately affects those from poorer backgrounds. (2/2)July 27, 2020





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1h ago11:30





Quarantine U-turn for Spain ‘hammer blow’ for travel and tourism industries, says BCC



The British Chambers of Commerce has described the snap decision on Saturday to reimpose quarantine restrictions on travellers returning to the UK from Spain as a “hammer blow” to the travel and tourism industries. This is from the BCC’s director general, Adam Marshall. He said:





Abrupt changes to quarantine measures will be yet another hammer blow for the fragile travel and tourism industries, both here in the UK and overseas.





Firms will now have to manage the effects of this unexpected change as returning staff have to quarantine upon their return to the UK. Support measures should be extended to help firms and their employees manage the additional uncertainty generated by this and other government decisions.





Businesses will be asking why Spain was on the safe list on Friday, only to be taken off it on Saturday. Changes to quarantine rules must be communicated clearly by government with as much notice as possible. Continued improvement of the test and trace programme, alongside co-ordinated checks at departure and arrival airports, could alleviate the need for many of these restrictions.





Adam Marshall at a BCC conference in March. Adam Marshall at a BCC conference in March. Photograph: Mark Thomas/Rex/Shutterstock



Updated at 11.33am BSTFacebookTwitter





1h ago11:20





London mayor urges government not to start scaling back furlough scheme from August



Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, has urged the government not to start scaling back the furlough scheme next month. From August employers using the scheme will have to start paying national insurance and pensions contributions. But Khan said some firms in London’s cultural and hospitality sector would not be able to cope, and that new figures from HMRC showed the number of workers in London being furloughed rising by 20% in June, taking the total to 1.3 million – 30% of the capital’s eligible workforce.





In a statement Khan said:





We want to do everything we possibly can to get our businesses and venues in London thriving once again, but many are on financial knife edge with social distancing rules meaning a return to normality is still a long way off. The current financial challenges for business in central London and the West End remain particularly acute.





For sectors such as creative industries and hospitality it is still too early for many businesses to pick up the cost of national insurance and pension contributions – I am deeply concerned this will simply accelerate a surge in unemployment in businesses already struggling to cover their costs.





The government must continue to invest in the furlough scheme now, or I fear we will see the tragic social and economic consequences of further unemployment.





Sadiq Khan visiting a cafe in the Olympic Park earlier this month. Sadiq Khan visiting a cafe in the Olympic Park earlier this month. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA



Updated at 11.33am BSTFacebookTwitterAdvertisement





2h ago10:43





In a briefing on the obesity strategy announced by the government today (see 9.14am and 9.54am), the Institute for Fiscal Studies, the tax and spending thinktank, says the government’s plan for a ban on TV and online adverts for food high in fat, sugar and salt before 9pm might only have a limited impact. The IFS says:





It is unlikely that extending advertising restrictions would lead to such a large reduction in the amount of advertising for unhealthy food and drinks that people actually see. This is because firms could increase their advertising of these products after the watershed or on other types of media.





Research has shown that this happened before. Following the introduction of the 2007 ban on advertising food and drink products that are high in fat, sugar or salt during children’s television, restricted adverts were shifted from children’s television to unrestricted non-children’s television.





Updated at 10.52am BSTFacebookTwitter





2h ago10:32





The Office for National Statistics has announced that its Covid-19 infection survey is going to be extended to cover Northern Ireland. The survey tracks the incidence of coronavirus not by counting the number of people who fall ill and test positive, but by sending out testing kits by a representative sample of people picked randomly, which means it picks up asymptomatic cases as well as symptomatic cases.





The Northern Ireland health minister, Robin Swann, said:





I very much welcome the fact that the Covid-19 infection survey is being rolled out to Northern Ireland. The research will complement studies already underway into antibody seroprevalence in different population groups.





The more we know and understand about Covid -19, the better equipped we will be to deal with it.





It is particularly important that we build up our knowledge on the spread of the virus within our population.





I would strongly encourage anyone who receives an invitation to take part in the survey to accept.





The ONS survey has already been tracking cases in England and Wales. Its latest report, published last week, estimated that around one person in 2,000 in England had coronavirus in the week from 13 to 19 July, the most recent for which data is available.





It also estimated that new cases that week were running at round 2,800 per day in England.





Updated at 10.53am BSTFacebookTwitter





2h ago10:14





Siobhan Benita has announced that she is withdrawing as the Lib Dem candidate for London mayor because she cannot commit to campaigning for another year. The election was due to be held in May, but was postponed until 2021 because of coronavirus. She said:





The demands on a candidate are significant and an election of this scale, particularly in an unpaid role, means it’s really difficult to get other work.





And unfortunately with the delay due to the pandemic I’m simply not able to commit to another full year of campaigning and to leading the type of campaign that I really want to lead in London.FacebookTwitterAdvertisement





3h ago10:00





On the government’s tackling obesity strategy, these are from my colleague Peter Walker (who posted them on Twitter earlier before joining the 48-hour boycott organised as a protest against Twitter’s complacency in relation to antisemitism). Peter is something of a specialist on this topic, with a book out next year on the health benefits of exercise.





Updated at 10.21am BSTFacebookTwitter





3h ago09:54 Andrew Sparrow





Andrew Sparrow





Good morning. I’m Andrew Sparrow, taking over from Ben Quinn.





We have already posted Boris Johnson video about the importance of taking exercise (note the subtle “10” badge in the top left hand corner of the video, matching the logo on a face mask Johnson was wearing in Scotland last week – a sign perhaps that No 10 is not going to let Rishi Sunak win the Downing Street upmarket branding contest without a fight), and our story about the obesity strategy is here, but the full details are now on the government’s website.





Here is the full tackling obesity policy paper, here is the official news release about it, here is the government’s formal response (pdf) to its consultation on mandatory calorie labelling in restaurants and here is its equality assessment (pdf) of the calorie labelling plan.





Boris Johnson wearing a face mask with “10” branding on it in Scotland last week. Boris Johnson wearing a face mask with ‘10’ branding on it in Scotland last week. Photograph: Robert Perry/PA



Updated at 10.21am BSTFacebookTwitter





3h ago09:14





The prime minister – who has previously been a prominent critic of state-backed measures to get people’s weight down – has claimed that the new “Better Health Strategy” would help people “not in an excessively bossy or nannying way”.





A video showing Boris Johnson walking the dog, to the strains of gentle classical music, has been posted on his twitter account, where he adds:





“We want this one really to be sympathetic to people, to understand the difficulties that people face with their weight, the struggles that everybody faces or many, many people face to lose weight, and just to be helpful.





Boris Johnson #StayAlert(@BorisJohnson)

Losing weight is hard but with some small changes we can all feel fitter and healthier.

If we all do our bit, we can reduce our health risks and protect ourselves against coronavirus – as well as taking pressure off the NHS.

Our Better Health Strategy https://t.co/WdazXhuhRN pic.twitter.com/KZhW8p17FJJuly 27, 2020





This looks fairly synchronised. The government’s obesity plans also got some backing from chef Jamie Oliver, a longtime campaigner against child obesity, who tweeted this at around the same time as the Johnson tweet came out:





Jamie Oliver(@jamieoliver)

.@BorisJohnson has #AdEnough & has committed to reducing how many junk food ads kids see on tv & online by introducing a 9pm watershed!

Big love to all of you who have supported our campaign. Let’s keep up the momentum so we can offer all kids a healthier and better future! pic.twitter.com/mdq9ESa9Q3July 27, 2020





Updated at 9.37am BSTFacebookTwitterAdvertisement





4h ago09:05





Here’s a quick look at how some of the morning newspapers treated the government’s announcement on travel Spain:





















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4h ago08:58





Ryanair has no plans to reduce flights to and from Spain



Ryanair will not reduce the number of flights to and from Spain, despite the British government’s decision to impose a 14-day quarantine on visitors returning from the country, which the airline’s chief financial officer called “regrettable,” reports Joanna Partridge.





The requirement for all travellers arriving in the UK from Spain to self-isolate for two weeks came into effect at midnight on Sunday, only hours after it was announced.

“I think it is regrettable, very disappointing,” Neil Sorahan told Reuters in an interview after the release of the Irish airline’s quarterly financial results.





Ryanair has not followed the lead of Tui, Europe’s biggest holiday company, which has cancelled all Britons’ holidays to mainland Spain up and including 9 August.





A man stands at a Ryanair check-in desk at Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat airport. A man stands at a Ryanair check-in desk at Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat airport. Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters



Updated at 9.38am BSTFacebookTwitterAdvertisement





4h ago08:56





Travellers who are already there and those who were due to go on holiday in Spain this morning and the coming days have been airing their concerns on social media this morning, in some cases taking aim at the approach of individual companies.





sharryn walters(@sharrynlucywalt)

@Ryanair so all our extended families flights have been cancelled with @easyJet & @TUIUK for a big family holiday we were going on to Spain

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Published on July 27, 2020 03:11
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