Government to introduce mandatory Covid tests for UK-bound travellers

Sign of the times: Covid testing centre at Heathrow Airport Terminal 2 (Simon Calder)
Sign of the times: Covid testing centre at Heathrow Airport Terminal 2 (Simon Calder)

Nine months after the aviation industry started calling for testing to reduce the spread of the coronavirus, the UK government is set to make a negative Covid result compulsory for some travellers to the UK.

At the No 10 press conference on Tuesday, the prime minister told Andrew Woodcock of The Independent: "We will be bringing in measures to ensure that we test people coming into this country and prevent the virus being readmitted.”

The Independent understands that polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests taken no more than 72 hours before departure to the UK may be mandatory only for foreigners; some government figures are pressing for British nationals and those resident in the UK to be exempt.

Passengers affected by the new rule will need to show a negative test certificate before being allowed to board trains, ferries or planes to the UK.

The move would bring the UK into line with many other countries – except that few nations exempt their own citizens and residents from testing.

Pre-departure and arrival testing is likely to be welcomed by airlines and airports as a long-overdue step.

In April 2020, Heathrow airport’s chief executive, John Holland-Kaye, wrote to the health secretary calling for a “common international standard” for health screening at airports to build confidence in international travel.

The government may also impose a requirement to be tested on arrival. This would constitute a significant U-turn, as ministers have insisted for months that the practice would be pointless.

Both the prime minister and the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, have repeatedly dismissed appeals by airlines and airports to test travellers arriving in the UK, basing their view on a purely theoretical study carried out in June 2020.

Boris Johnson said in September: “Ninety-three per cent of the time you could have a real false sense of security, a false sense of confidence when you arrive and take a test.”

In October, Mr Shapps appeared to hint that new data supported the government’s position, saying: “This is what has taken time to get to the bottom of, that you’d only pick up about seven per cent of those who are asymptomatic coming off that flight on day zero.” But the Department for Transport (DfT) confirmed that it was a reference to the same theoretical study.

At the same time, Mr Holland-Kaye said: “Britain is falling behind because we’ve been too slow to embrace passenger testing.

“European leaders acted quicker and now their economies are reaping the benefits. Paris has overtaken Heathrow as Europe’s largest airport for the first time ever.”

In December, the home secretary, Priti Patel, wrongly claimed that travellers to the UK already faced tests. She told the BBC’s Today programme: “We ask passengers to take tests before they get on aeroplanes.”

Heathrow airport tweeted: “We continue to request that the UK government establish a common international standard for pre-departure testing to ensure safer travel to and from all destinations.”

A DfT spokesperson said: “This country already has some of the strongest safeguards against importing Covid-19 in the shape of mandatory 10 day quarantine for the vast majority of arrivals, and Test to Release.

“Additional measures, including testing before departure, will help keep the importation of new cases to an absolute minimum, while national lockdown and vaccination take effect.”

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