UK's Boris Johnson Hopes International Travel to Restart from Mid-May

 British PM Boris Johnson said on Monday his government was hopeful that non-essential international travel would restart from 17 May, following the unveiling of a new traffic light system, news wires reported.

On Monday, Johnson's government published a document that outlines a new red, amber and green system for residents in England who want to go on holiday abroad amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Each country will be given a rating that determines whether or not travellers will need to go into quarantine upon their return.

Residents heading to "green" countries will have to take coronavirus tests before and after departure but will not have to quarantine upon returning to England. For "amber" or "red" countries, citizens would have to take tests as well as go into quarantine upon their return.

The system will be based on how many people have been vaccinated in each country, its rate of infection, emerging coronavirus variants and access to "reliable scientific data and genomic sequencing." However, it is "too early" to say which countries will be on which list, the document says. While the traffic light system is just for England, the British government is said to be in talks with the devolved governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

During a Downing Street press briefing on Monday, Johnson also warned that the date when people can travel internationally for holidays again may change due to the changing nature of the pandemic.  "We don't want to see the virus being reimported into this country from abroad," he said. He added that further detail about the new system will be published by the Global Travel Taskforce, which advises Johnson on how to tackle the issue of travel during the pandemic, later this week.

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