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Travellers from China to require negative Covid-19 test to enter UK from January

Anyone flying from China from January 5 will be required to show a negative Covid-19 test before departing.

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The UK Government is set to follow other countries by requiring travellers from China to be tested for Covid-19 from early next year.

From January 5, travellers from China into England will be required to show a negative Covid-19 test before departing in a move described as “balanced and precautionary” by the Government.

The plan will sees the Government fall in behind the US and several other countries by introducing mandatory testing for travellers from China, amid concerns about surging case numbers in the Asian country.

The Department of Health stressed the new measures, which include plans for surveillance testing of a sample of passengers arriving into England, would be kept under “regular review”.

Concerns have grown in recent days about surging case numbers in China, as Beijing announced plans to start reissuing passports and visas for overseas trips.

The Government said that China had failed to fully share information on the situation there, as cases soared after it relaxed its tough Covid-19 restrictions.

Responsibility will lie with airlines to check passengers’ negative tests, the Department of Health said.

“This allows our world-leading scientists at the UK Health Security Agency to gain rapid insight into potential new variants circulating in China.”

Alongside the US, India, Italy, South Korea and Taiwan have all set out plans to require visitors from China to be tested for the virus.

Some Tory MPs had been calling for a more robust response from the Government, even as some experts had questioned the usefulness of such restrictions.

Under the new rules, the Covid-19 test will need to have been taken no more than two days before departure.

Professor Sir Andrew Pollard, chairman of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation, said on Friday morning: “Trying to ban a virus by adjusting what we do with travel has already been shown not to work very well. We have seen that with the bans on travel from various countries during the pandemic.”

Professor Sir Andrew Pollard
Professor Sir Andrew Pollard said the more vulnerable in a population had to be protected (Jeff Overs/PA)

The UK Health Security Agency (HSA) will carry out the surveillance testing from January 8.

The HSA chief medical adviser Professor Susan Hopkins said staff would continue to monitor the spread of any new Covid-19 variants.

“The evidence suggests the recent rise in cases in China is due to low natural immunity and lower vaccine uptake including boosters rather than the emergence of new Covid-19 variants – unlike in the UK where vaccines are maintaining high population protection,” she said.

“In order to improve our intelligence, we are enhancing our surveillance, in addition to our current routine testing protocol.”

There are no direct flights from China to Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, but the Government said it would be working with the devolved administrations to ensure measures are implemented across the UK.

The Department of Health said that the volume of passengers arriving from China remains low, as it stressed that the best protection against Covid-19 remained getting vaccinated.

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