South American countries ban British flights over new COVID-19 strain
South American countries ban British flights
over new COVID-19 strain
Argentina, Chile, and Colombia
joined a raft of other countries that took action on Sunday to stop flights
from Britain due to concerns over a new, highly contagious variant of the novel
Coronavirus (COVID-19). Argentina will “suspend arrivals and departures to and
from Britain as a precaution from tomorrow,” the interior ministry in Buenos
Aires wrote in a statement Sunday evening. A single flight from Britain
expected for Monday morning has been allowed to land at Buenos Aires
International Airport. Passengers and crew will be kept in quarantine for seven
days.
The Colombian government also
decided on Sunday to no longer allow flights to and from Britain from Monday,
President Ivan Duque wrote on Twitter. Accordingly, passengers who have arrived
in the past eight days must be quarantined. According to a statement, the
Chilean government decided to suspend direct flights to and from Britain from
Tuesday.
Foreigners who do not have permanent
residence in Chile and have been in Britain in the past two weeks are also not
allowed to enter. Chileans and foreigners who have a permanent residence must
be in a 14-day quarantine. The new mutation is up to 70 per cent more
contagious than the previously known form, according to British authorities. To
tamp down the spread, Britain announced a new lockdown for London and parts of
south and eastern England starting Sunday and over the Christmas period. The
measures affect 16 million people.
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