Covid-19: New Strains Brings Travel Tensions between France and UK

It looks like a quarantine war has broken out between Great Britain and France:
London on Friday evening cracked down on the rules for those returning from beyond the Channel and yesterday Paris immediately responded by imposing a tampon in the previous 24 hours, instead of 48, for those who show up there from the UK.

But the move by Boris Johnson's government has sowed panic and chaos especially among hundreds of thousands of British citizens. France is already on the orange list in the traffic light system that regulates travel abroad: this means that those who return must do 10 days of quarantine and undergo a double, expensive swab. But from tomorrow those who return from the countries on this list (which also includes Italy) will be exempted from quarantine if they can prove that they have received the double dose of vaccine: Friday evening, however, the French exception has landed, which maintains the quarantine for everyone, regardless of vaccinations.

The reason lies in the Beta variant, i.e. the South African variant, which now accounts for ten percent of new infections in France: a variant that is not particularly contagious, especially compared to the Delta, which is the dominant one in Great Britain, but which seems to be more resistant to vaccines, especially AstraZeneca. 

In Great Britain there have so far only been a thousand infections due to the Beta variant and the authorities want to prevent it from spreading: because otherwise, the level of infections in France is much lower than in Great Britain, with only 27,000 new cases compared to 244,000 in the past week.

Indeed, the London government had even considered placing France on the red list, which implies a quarantine in the hotel at its own expense: but then it...

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