Heathrow heading for death row as other airports fly high

Trade and tourists continue to elude what used to be the busiest airport in Europe

People from countries on the UK’s red list are required to quarantine upon arrival there, irrespective of whether they have been vaccinated.
People from countries on the UK’s red list are required to quarantine upon arrival there, irrespective of whether they have been vaccinated. (123RF/irstone)

Heathrow, Britain’s biggest airport, said on Monday passenger numbers were still 71% lower in August compared with the same month before the Covid-19 pandemic, as it demanded the government change its travel rules to help the sector recover.

Heathrow blamed the complicated, changing and expensive rules for those arriving in the UK for Britain’s much slower travel recovery vs competitors, pushing it down to 10th busiest European airport, from its top spot in 2019.

Expectations are growing that there will be a simplification of those travel rules after health minister Sajid Javid said on Sunday he wanted to “get rid of” expensive PCR tests for travellers as soon as possible.

British prime minister Boris Johnson will this week set out his plans to manage the Covid-19 pandemic in the winter months there.

Heathrow said it would favour a two-tier system, with destination countries rated either low risk or high risk, with the latter still requiring hotel quarantine.

Fully vaccinated travellers would be able to travel freely, the system being used by many European countries, while those not vaccinated would take pre-departure or arrival tests using lateral flow tests, which are cheaper than PCR tests.

There are three tiers, with expensive tests always required, even for those who are fully vaccinated.

The airport said major airlines supported the idea, as it warned of the consequences of not improving the current system.

“If ministers fail to take this opportunity to streamline the travel rules then the UK will fall further behind as trade and tourists will increasingly bypass the UK,” Heathrow CEO John Holland-Kaye said.

The airport also called on the government to ensure it had adequate staff at the border after reports of hours-long queues in recent weeks.

— Reuters

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