Now for some good news: France will allow fully vaccinated Britons in for holidays from June 9 and kids can show a negative test - but tourists with only one jab or none must quarantine for seven days

  • British people who are fully vaccinated against Coronavirus will be able to enter France with proof of a negative antigen test
  • Fully vaccinated is defined as two weeks after the second dose of vaccine 
  • Unvaccinated or partially vaccinated travellers will have to quarantine for 7 days
  • France is still on Britain's amber list requiring 10 days quarantine on return 

British tourists who are fully vaccinated against Coronavirus will be able to enter France with proof of a negative antigen test from next week and do not need a 'compelling reason' to be in the country, it was revealed today.

Fully vaccinated is defined as two weeks after the second dose of an EU-approved jab - including all jabs currently in use in the UK - and it is expected the NHS app can be used as proof.

However, tourists with only one jab or none won't be allowed into France without a 'compelling reason' to visit - and must isolate for seven days as well as provide proof of a negative test on arrival.

Children of fully vaccinated parents do not have to have the jab, but will still have to provide proof of a negative test, according to the French government guidance.

Children accompanying unvaccinated adults will need to have a 'compelling reason' for their visit, and will also have to isolate for seven days.

The French government does not specify a cut-off age for vaccinations, but the country's 'Pass Sanitaire' system - the domestic version of the travel rules - currently does not apply any testing requirements to those aged under 11. 

That will be a boost to younger families, but a blow for any older families wishing to head for sunnier climes in France because teens and early-20s are unlikely to receive both doses of a vaccine before the end of summer.

And there are currently no plans to vaccinate UK teenagers, with the British government prioritising second doses for more vulnerable age groups.

The border opening on June 9 will also allow vaccinated EU passport holders in without any proof of testing at all. Those without a vaccine will have to take either a PCR test or rapid test before departure.

The relaxation in requirements comes as Britain itself clamps down on travel abroad, with the removal of Portugal from the 'green list' of approved destinations yesterday unleashing chaos and a wave of cancelled bookings.

France is on the UK amber list, meaning that Britons must quarantine for ten days on their return and take two Covid tests, as well as testing negative before they depart for France. 

The  British list of approved destinations is due to be reviewed every three weeks.

France is currently on the UK amber list, meaning that Britons must quarantine for ten days on their return and take two Covid tests, as well as testing negative before they depart

 France is currently on the UK amber list, meaning that Britons must quarantine for ten days on their return and take two Covid tests, as well as testing negative before they depart

Paris's pavement cafes opened for the first time in months on May 19

Paris's pavement cafes opened for the first time in months on May 19 

Last week, French officials had been threatening to force all British travellers into quarantine with the threat of fines if they were caught ignoring the rules, and the move will be welcomed by Brits who are still hoping to go abroad on holiday.    

A new document released in Paris on Friday called 'Strategy for Reopening Borders' outlines plans for what is effectively a travel passport.

Destinations welcoming British tourists (and the tests and forms needed before you fly): 

Portugal 

PCR test 72 hours before

Temp check on arrival

+ Complete passenger info form

Some places will accept evidence of jab

Spain

No restrictions

Form before travel

Negative test but only if coming from France

Greece

PCR test 72 hours before

OR Proof of full vaccination, 14 days before arrival

Rapid test on arrival

Italy

Negative test (PCR or rapid) within 48 hours

Fill out arrival form

Call Covid helpline to inform them of visit

Turkey

Negative PCR test within 72 hours

Fill out info form

Symptom check on arrival

Iceland

Certificate of full vaccination

OR Certificate of previous infection

Free test on arrival, must isolate until results come back

Malta

PCR test 72 hours before arrival

Passenger locator form

Croatia

PCR or rapid test 48 hours before

OR Fully vaccinated 14 days before travel

OR Certificate proving previous infection

Evidence of paid accommodation in Croatia

Cyprus

PCR test 72 hours before

OR Evidence of full vaccination (not required, but skips testing requirement)

+ Fill out form 24 hours in advance of travel

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Documents issued by organisations including the National Health Service which prove a double vaccination against Coronavirus will be sufficient to get into France.

Up until today, anybody entering France from the UK has required a 'compelling reason' for being in the country.

The acceptance by French border officials of an antigen test, as opposed to the far expensive PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) is also highly significant.

It will mean that travellers can avoid paying £100 plus to a private firm for a PCR test, and instead opt for an antigen test, which is often free.

'Europeans vaccinated against Covid-19 will be able to enter France without a PCR test from June 9, which proof of a negative test – PCR or antigen – will still be required for travellers from the United Kingdom and the United States,' said a French government source.

'Those who have had a full vaccination for at least fourteen days on the date of travel (and four weeks for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine) are considered to be vaccinated.'

The source added: 'For countries classified in orange, such as the United States or Great Britain, a PCR or antigen test is required if the traveler is vaccinated, otherwise he must have a compelling reason for being in France, a negative test and go into isolation for seven days.'

Despite France effectively giving the green light for holidays, Britons travelling to France will still have to isolate for up to 10 days when they get back to the UK.

They will also have to pay for at least two tests which government recommended providers are currently charging up to £390 for.

The confused state of affairs comes amid holiday hell for Britons who travelled to green listed Portugal who now face a race to get home in less than four days time after the Government added it to the amber list over fears of the Nepal variant.

Britons keen to stay abroad for as long as they can before the new rules come in next Tuesday at 4am face paying at least £258 if they fly back home the night before. That is the cheapest flight next Monday, a Wizz Air route leaving Faro at 9.05pm local time and arriving at London Luton at 11.50pm, four hours before the rules change. 

Anyone flying back today faces paying at least £99, also for a Wizz Air flight to Luton; while it is £91 on Saturday or £172 on Sunday, both for easyJet services to Gatwick. 

The most expensive seats before Tuesday's deadline can be found for £711 on a British Airways service from Faro to London City, leaving next Monday at 11am. 

Those returning from an amber list country will be required either to quarantine at home for ten days on their return and take a PCR test on days two and eight, as well as a lateral flow test before the return flight.

Or they can pay for an additional third 'Test to Release' on day five to end self-isolation early. They will still need to take the compulsory second test on or after day eight.

British families of four in Portugal now face having to pay £1,500 to buy three sets of PCR tests at £125 each, if they go under the 'Test to Release' scheme.

Adding this to the cost of a lateral flow test, which can be bought at Faro Airport for €30 (£25), the total cost of tests for a family of four would be about £1,600. 

Holidays to Portugal have been thrown into chaos after ministers removed it from the green list amid concerns over the new Nepal Covid variant.

Ghost town Ibiza: Meanwhile normally-packed beaches on the Spanish holiday island of Ibiza are deserted today as Covid restrictions ground tourists across Europe

Ghost town Ibiza: Meanwhile normally-packed beaches on the Spanish holiday island of Ibiza are deserted today as Covid restrictions ground tourists across Europe

The move triggered a furious diplomatic row, with Portugal's president accusing UK ministers of 'health fundamentalism' and of being 'obsessed' with infection rates.

Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, Portugal's president, has accused UK ministers of 'not recognising that we live in a different situation than we lived before vaccination'. 

Mr Rebelo de Sousa added: 'The numbers are going up, but they are not increasing inpatients and ICU numbers and deaths. We can't keep obsessively looking at it this way, ignoring that with vaccination, reality has changed.'  

Portugal's infection rate is similar to the UK's, with the rolling seven-day average being 53.63 cases per million of the population compared to the UK's 51.41. Some 45 per cent of its adult population have received at least one dose.

But Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said the country's infection rate had almost doubled since it was put on the green list three weeks ago. He added: 'In the end we've seen two things that have caused concern - one thing is that the positivity rate has nearly doubled, since the last review, in Portugal.

'And the other thing is there's a sort of Nepal mutation of the so-called Indian variant which has been detected and we just don't know the potential for that to be a vaccine-defeating mutation.  We simply don't want to take the risk as we come up to June 21 and the review of the fourth stage of the [domestic] unlock.' 

And Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said Portuguese scientists had detected the Nepal variant, adding: 'What we don't yet know is how prevalent it is in Portugal - but more importantly than that, whether this really is a significant problem.

'You could of course wait whilst we do that research and then, God forbid, we learn that it is very virulent, that it does compromise our vaccines, or we can take a safety-first approach.'at this stage is the right thing to do.'

Travel bosses have accused ministers of laying waste to the industry and isolating the UK amid fears the shutdown could cost the economy more than £11billion. The shrinking of the green list, the move to downgrade Portugal and the expansion of the red list wiped £2billion off the value of airlines. 

 

Holiday HELL for 112,000 Britons left with four days to flee Portugal to avoid quarantine as flights home soar to £700 EACH with family-of-four suddenly facing £1,600 testing bill after nation was stripped off 'green list'

  • Portugal will come off UK green list for quarantine-free travel next Tuesday after being added on May 17
  • Britons in Portugal react with fury after being told to dash home before Tuesday or face quarantine 
  • Travellers said the UK move to downgrade Portugal from green to amber was 'unfair' and 'stressful'
  • Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announced relegation after rise in positive tests in Portugal

What tests do you need when returning from foreign countries? 

GREEN LIST

You will be required to take a lateral flow test within 72 hours of your return flight to England, followed by a PCR test on or before the second day of your return. You will not be required to self-isolate during this time.

The cost of a PCR test can be up to £125 each in Britain, while a lateral flow test taken abroad at Faro Airport, for example, is about €30 (£25).

When arriving in the foreign country, you may also need to need provide proof of a negative PCR taken within 72 hours of your outbound flight, or proof of vaccination, depending on the destination's requirements.

AMBER LIST

You will be required either to quarantine at home for ten days on your return and take a PCR test on days two and eight, as well as a lateral flow test before the return flight.

Or you can pay for an additional third 'Test to Release' on day five to end self-isolation early. You will still need to take the compulsory second test on or after day eight.

British families of four in Portugal now face having to pay £1,500 to buy three sets of PCR tests at £125 each, if they go under the 'Test to Release' scheme.

Adding this to the cost of a lateral flow test, which can be bought at Faro Airport for €30 (£25), the total cost for a family of four would be about £1,600.

RED LIST

If you travel to a red list country, or are in an amber country that turns red before you return, you would need to quarantine at a government-approved hotel on your return at a cost of £1,750.

Before you travel to England, you must take a PCR or lateral flow test and get a negative result during the three days before you travel.

You should also book a quarantine hotel package - including two further tests for when you are in the hotel - and complete a passenger locator form.

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Seats on the last flights back to London from the Algarve before Portugal is removed from the UK's green list in less than four days' time were on sale for up to £711 today as Britons faced a race to get home. 

Britons keen to stay abroad for as long as they can before the new rules come in next Tuesday at 4am face paying at least £258 if they fly back home the night before. That is the cheapest flight next Monday, a Wizz Air route leaving Faro at 9.05pm local time and arriving at London Luton at 11.50pm, four hours before the rules change.

Anyone flying back today faces paying at least £99, also for a Wizz Air flight to Luton; while it is £91 on Saturday or £172 on Sunday, both for easyJet services to Gatwick. The most expensive seats before Tuesday's deadline can be found for £711 on a British Airways service from Faro to London City, leaving next Monday at 11am. 

Those returning from an amber list country will be required either to quarantine at home for ten days on their return and take a PCR test on days two and eight, as well as a lateral flow test before the return flight. Or they can pay for an additional third 'Test to Release' on day five to end self-isolation early. They will still need to take the compulsory second test on or after day eight.

British families of four in Portugal now face having to pay £1,500 to buy three sets of PCR tests at £125 each, if they go under the 'Test to Release' scheme. Adding this to the cost of a lateral flow test, which can be bought at Faro Airport for €30 (£25), the total cost of tests for a family of four would be about £1,600. 

Holidays to Portugal have been thrown into chaos after ministers removed it from the green list amid concerns over the new Nepal Covid variant. The move triggered a furious diplomatic row, with Portugal's president accusing UK ministers of 'health fundamentalism' and of being 'obsessed' with infection rates.

It also sparked a race among thousands of Britons in Portugal to get back before quarantine-on-return rules kick in on Tuesday. Those booked to go in coming weeks were left in limbo over whether to go ahead with their holiday under the tougher quarantine rules or to rebook for later in the summer and hope the country goes green again.

The decision to move Portugal onto the 'amber list' was apparently triggered by concerns over the Nepal variant, a mutated version of the Indian strain. But Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, Portugal's president, has accused UK ministers of 'not recognising that we live in a different situation than we lived before vaccination'. 

Mr Rebelo de Sousa added: 'The numbers are going up, but they are not increasing inpatients and ICU numbers and deaths. We can't keep obsessively looking at it this way, ignoring that with vaccination, reality has changed.' 

Among those trying to get home before the change is Simon Smith, from Stamford, Lincolnshire, who is currently on holiday at Lagos in Portugal. He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme this morning: 'Bit of a scramble I'm afraid.

'We're trying to get some testing organised but obviously the Government released the information yesterday and it was a bank holiday in Portugal which didn't help. We've got the flights booked for Saturday at 10 o'clock but we're being told by local doctors that it can be up to three or four days waiting for tests, so that we can fly.'

Jet2 has cancelled all international flights and holidays up to July 1 and Easyjet will 'review' its flights after Portugal was pulled from the green list. Albufeira-based bar owner Gary Search, 54, said: 'One of the bars is 98 per cent British tourists and in the other about 50 per cent of our customers are Brits who are also mostly holidaymakers. 

'We're absolutely devastated by today's decision. We'd literally just got off the ground, we'd been scrabbling around all week getting new staff because obviously we couldn't employ the staff till we got busy. 

'There's no staff here because of Brexit and Covid so it's been extremely difficult. We'd just put them all on contracts and then this happens. It's messed things right up to be honest.'

Pedro Neto, general manager of the luxury Vila Monte Farm House hotel in the Algarve, said the hotel was already receiving cancellations. He added: 'It's very difficult news to receive. We are a hotel with a lot of British guests and this is obviously not the news that we were hoping for. People are so happy to be here, the weather is beautiful, everything is working as it should so this is not the news we were expecting.' 

Cristovao Norte, Portuguese MP for the Algarve, said he is 'perplexed' by the British Government's decision to remove Portugal from the green list. He told BBC Radio 4's Today Programme: 'We were not expecting the decision because there haven't been major changes in Portugal, just a spike in the Lisbon area.

'But we have 66 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. Our rate of transmission is more or less the UK rate, so we weren't expecting this decision from the English government. We wear masks, we obey the rules, we maintain social distancing, vaccination is growing steadily. So I'm a little bit perplexed.' 

Moving Portugal from green to amber means travellers will have to quarantine at home for ten days after visiting, while paying for and taking two Covid tests, on days two and eight. British families of four in Portugal now face having to pay £1,000 to buy PCR tests at £125 each - or another £500 if they use 'test to release' on day five.

Further complications may arise if the Foreign Office changes its stance and advises against visiting Portugal, which would invalidate travel insurance. The move to downgrade Portugal, including Madeira and the Azores, to amber came despite there being just three deaths in the country in the latest 24-hour period.

Its infection rate is similar to the UK's, with the rolling seven-day average being 53.63 cases per million of the population compared to the UK's 51.41. Some 45 per cent of its adult population have received at least one dose.

But Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said the country's infection rate had almost doubled since it was put on the green list three weeks ago. He added: 'In the end we've seen two things that have caused concern - one thing is that the positivity rate has nearly doubled, since the last review, in Portugal.

'And the other thing is there's a sort of Nepal mutation of the so-called Indian variant which has been detected and we just don't know the potential for that to be a vaccine-defeating mutation.  We simply don't want to take the risk as we come up to June 21 and the review of the fourth stage of the [domestic] unlock.' 

And Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said Portuguese scientists had detected the Nepal variant, adding: 'What we don't yet know is how prevalent it is in Portugal - but more importantly than that, whether this really is a significant problem.

'You could of course wait whilst we do that research and then, God forbid, we learn that it is very virulent, that it does compromise our vaccines, or we can take a safety-first approach.'at this stage is the right thing to do.'

Travel bosses have accused ministers of laying waste to the industry and isolating the UK amid fears the shutdown could cost the economy more than £11billion. The shrinking of the green list, the move to downgrade Portugal and the expansion of the red list wiped £2billion off the value of airlines. 

At Gatwick today - Friends Amy and Jade booked their £180 return flights to Faro on Wednesday - then 24 hours later had the grim news they must quarantine on their return and pay up to £400 each for Covid testing.
Essex couple Josh and Sophie said they were resigned to paying hundreds of pounds for Covid tests having already paid £700 for their EasyJet flights. As Josh works from home he will be able to quarantine without paying extra to be released after five days. Having waited so long for a family holiday with daughter Harriet, they were not going to let anything put them off

At Gatwick today - Friends Amy and Jade (left) booked their £180 return flights to Faro on Wednesday - then 24 hours later had the grim news they must quarantine on their return and pay up to £400 each for Covid testing. Essex couple Josh and Sophie (right) said they were resigned to paying hundreds of pounds for Covid tests having already paid £700 for their EasyJet flights. As Josh works from home he will be able to quarantine without paying extra to be released after five days. Having waited so long for a family holiday with daughter Harriet, they were not going to let anything put them off

Students (from left) Esther-Leah Cohen, Judy Liebert, Tamar Smith and Ellie Sharer who have returned to London Stansted Airport from a holiday in Porto, Portugal.

Students (from left) Esther-Leah Cohen, Judy Liebert, Tamar Smith and Ellie Sharer who have returned to London Stansted Airport from a holiday in Porto, Portugal.

Passengers check into the North Terminal at London Gatwick Airport today before the new travel restrictions are activated

Passengers check into the North Terminal at London Gatwick Airport today before the new travel restrictions are activated

Travellers at Faro Airport last Sunday, standing in a queue of 100 people snaking round six times where only three check-in desks were open for as many as six flights going back to the UK

Travellers at Faro Airport last Sunday, standing in a queue of 100 people snaking round six times where only three check-in desks were open for as many as six flights going back to the UK

Air passengers leave Faro Airport on May 17, which was the first day that Britons were allowed to enter Portugal without needing to quarantine and the foreign travel ban was lifted

Empty sunshades wait for customers at Gale beach at Albufeira in Portugal's Algarve on May 18

Empty sunshades wait for customers at Gale beach at Albufeira in Portugal's Algarve on May 18

Meanwhile, industry figures warned that at least half the 1.6million jobs in the sector had either already been lost or were now at risk, with many more redundancies feared. Many had been hoping for an expansion of the green list and a signal that foreign holidays will be back on the agenda this summer. 

Instead, with the next review three weeks away, travel bosses were left fearing 'another lost summer' and a shattering of consumer confidence.

British holidaymakers reveal how they have cut their family holidays to Portugal short in order to avoid quarantine in UK 

Changing rules at will? It feels wrong 

Karen Beddow (pictured with her husband Matthew and daughters Lily, Isobel and Eve) said she felt let down after being forced to cut her family holiday to Portugal short in order to avoid quarantine on return to the UK

Karen Beddow (pictured with her husband Matthew and daughters Lily, Isobel and Eve) said she felt let down after being forced to cut her family holiday to Portugal short in order to avoid quarantine on return to the UK

Karen Beddow said she felt let down after being forced to cut her family holiday to Portugal short in order to avoid quarantine on return to the UK.

She had travelled to a villa in the Algarve with her husband Matthew, their three daughters and her parents last month. Mrs Beddow, 43, from the Wirral in Cheshire, said the family was due to fly back to the UK on Tuesday just hours after the new 'amber list' restrictions take effect.

Faced with the prospect of additional testing and quarantine, and fearing Portugal was likely to go on the list, she scrambled to rearrange the flights to Sunday before the official announcement was made yesterday.

Although able to change the Easyjet flights for her immediate family for free, her parents faced a sizeable fee to make the changes. 

Mrs Beddow said the family also had to rearrange pre-booked Covid tests to be taken on their return to the UK in line with Government rules.

She said: 'We cut our holiday short by two days which I actually feel really annoyed about. Not because of us but because my parents decided to change their flights as well.

'I feel really let down because the whole thing about this green list was to give people certainty. We were told there would be three weeks' notice.

'Obviously, what they actually mean is three weeks' notice of countries coming on the list, not coming off. I certainly felt that if we went away we could have two weeks and have a window. If they are going to change flights at will that just feels wrong.

'It's all very stressful having to fix this as well. We had an afternoon of faffing and sorting out.'

Mrs Beddow, a travel blogger, and her husband, a 47-year-old property developer, spent £665 on travel tests for the couple and their three daughters.

The holidaymaker, who runs a travel blog at minitravellers.co.uk, said that she felt 'lucky to have made it to Portugal at all'. 

 

I had to cancel my last trip too

Having cancelled a family holiday to Portugal last year, Laura Wolfe faces more disappointment

Having cancelled a family holiday to Portugal last year, Laura Wolfe faces more disappointment

Having cancelled a family holiday to Portugal last year, Laura Wolfe faces more disappointment.

Her two-week trip to the Algarve with her partner Daniel and sons, aged ten and 16, is now in doubt.

Miss Wolfe, pictured, said the Government's decision to change the travel status of the country was 'a complete fiasco'. She said: 'Part of us is thinking we might just go. We have saved up and are in a position to do it. And we just love it there.

'But the issue is with the rules, which seem to be changing all of the time, the quarantine and the costs of the testing for four of us.

'If we do say 'sod it' and go, what then happens if the country is placed on the red list?

'The trip isn't for another eight weeks so things could change several times before then.'

Although the £6,000 holiday is refundable, the events and marketing worker, from Manchester, said the possibility of cancelling has provoked a lot of anxiety.

Miss Wolfe has had both Covid jabs and her partner is about to get his second. 'I thought this was part of why we were doing it,' she said.

'I know there are a lot of unknowns but if I am double-vaccinated and test negative, how can it not be OK for me to go away?'

 

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Mark Tanzer, chief executive of the travel agents' association Abta, said it was clear the Government's strategy was 'continuing to prevent any meaningful resumption of international travel'. 

He suggested it was time ministers considered bailing out the industry.

He warned: 'You can't build the recovery of a multi-billion-pound sector while mass market holiday destinations remain off the green list. The removal of Portugal comes on the back on what was already a very short and cautious green list.

'Travel agents and tour operators haven't been able to generate income since the start of the pandemic and have been depending on the return of international travel to help bring some much needed relief. 

'The Government now needs to come forward with tailored financial support for the sector.'

Other travel bosses meanwhile were equally scathing. EasyJet boss Johan Lundgren accused the Government of having 'torn up its own rule book'; Brian Strutton, from the pilots' union, said the decision to axe Portugal from the green list was 'a total disaster for the already fragile travel industry'; while Tim Alderslade, chief executive of Airlines UK, which represents carriers, accused the Government of leading the industry on a 'painful merry dance'.

Dame Irene Hays, owner of travel agent Hays Travel, said she was 'surprised and obviously disappointed' to hear of Portugal's move off the green list for travel from the UK.

She told Sky News she was 'disappointed for our customers, disappointed for the travel industry and really disappointed for Portugal, because they've tried so hard and their infection rates are so low. I know they're rising in Lisbon, but it's quite a way from the Algarve, which is where most of the tourists are'.

Asked if she felt that nuance had not been taken into consideration, Dame Irene said: 'It would be nice if it was a nuanced approach, but we are where we are.'

It is 'difficult' and 'very frustrating' for holidaymakers, particularly those who had just started their trips, she added.

While some people are still booking holidays for the summer, Dame Irene said the 'vast majority' are instead booking for autumn or 2022.

Julia Lo Bue-Said, CEO of Advantage Travel Partnership, said Portugal being added to the amber travel list just weeks after the holiday hotspot reopened for British tourists was a 'devastating blow'.

She told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'Clearly yesterday was an absolute blow, an absolute devastating blow for consumers and the industry of a really seismic scale now.'

Asked if she feels the Government has let the industry down, she said: 'Absolutely. I mean, the Government has completely moved the goal-posts from us overnight with no notice at all.'

Ms Lo Bue-Said said there was a lack of communication to enable the industry to put the right systems in place, adding that the move damages confidence.

'It now throws confidence completely out of the window, because if we can see something like Portugal that was on a green list move to amber within, sort of, you know, 90, 100 hours notice or whatever it is, what's going to happen if I make further plans?

'It puts the industry in a really difficult position and consumers in a difficult position in order to be able to plan effectively,' she said.

The outcry came after the Government said Portugal would be added to the amber list from next Tuesday, forcing thousands of British holidaymakers to cancel their trips or cut them short to avoid quarantine.

It means there will be just 11 countries or territories on the green list, of which only Iceland and Gibraltar are viable holiday destinations. Hopes that the Balearics or Greek islands could be added were also scuppered.

Instead, seven countries are being added to the red list, forcing anyone returning from them to quarantine in Government-approved hotels at a cost of up to £1,750 per person.

Senior figures warned the about-turn would devastate confidence in foreign holidays because of the uncertainty over whether a green country could suddenly turn amber.

In 2019, outbound tourism was worth £11.7billion to the UK economy for the summer months, according to the Future of Aviation Parliamentary Group. 

If the travel list stays as it is now for June, July and August, then it will only be worth a £200million.

Shares in IAG, the parent company of British Airways, fell 5 per cent, with easyJet sinking about the same. Ryanair closed 1.3 per cent lower and TUI fell about 4.5 per cent.

BA warned the UK had reached a 'critical point' and was in urgent need of more air travel for business and pleasure to restart the economy and reunite loved ones.

Karen Dee, boss of the Airport Operators Association, added: 'Summer 2021 is shaping up to be worse than last summer, which was the worst in aviation history.

'Analysis has shown that 860,000 jobs of the 1.6million UK jobs in aviation, travel and tourism were lost or sustained only due to government furlough schemes since the pandemic started.'

Mr Lundgren said: 'The Government has torn up its own rule book and ignored the science, throwing people's plans into chaos, with virtually no notice or alternative options for travel from the UK.'

Union boss Mr Stratton said: 'Our airlines need this summer season if they are to survive.'

Heathrow boss John Holland-Kaye called for rapid action to reopen flights to key trading partners and remove testing for vaccinated passengers from countries on the green list. 

Tim Hawkins of Manchester Airport Group said the latest announcement on travel lists had affected the company 'very negatively'. He told Times Radio: 'It's not a good situation to be in.

'We had worked on the basis that the travel corridors system, the traffic light system, would be providing people with confidence to book over the summer, and we'd see a really good recovery.

'But the Government does seem to have lost faith in its own system, and now we're seeing changes at short notice, we're seeing changes that we don't fully understand, and we're seeing a situation where lots of countries that have made really strong progress over the last few weeks are not being included on the green list. It's a situation we don't fully understand.'

Covid outbreak on SIX planes back from Portugal: Hundreds of Man City and Chelsea fans on five chartered flights and one Ryanair jet are told to self-isolate for 10 days after landing

Hundreds of Manchester City and Chelsea fans who travelled to Portugal and back for the Champions League final last weekend have been ordered to self-isolate for 10 days - as the country is axed from the UK's Green List over fears of the spread of the new Nepal Covid variant.

Supporters who travelled on the 9am Ryanair flight from Porto to Manchester on Sunday have been contacted by the NHS's Test and Trace app and told to self-isolate alongside three chartered flights of Chelsea fans who landed in London and two chartered planeloads of Manchester City fans who landed in Manchester.

Supporters took to fan message board to reveal they were contacted and told to self-isolate through the app, while others said they received an email or phone call. Fans began reporting the messages from yesterday evening - three days after landing back in the UK.

The news has led to fears that all 12,000 supporters who travelled from the UK to Portugal and back could be affected and told to isolate. It is unclear how many supporters have tested positive so far.

The source of a potential outbreak has yet to be identified although it is thought that the fans who have tested positive and triggered contact tracing likely had it before they flew to Portugal because of how quickly others have been told to self-isolate.

Sportsbreaks operated 10 official day flights for Chelsea with a combined capacity of 2,153 seats. Chelsea fans were offered a £199 travel package through the club on top of the cost of the match ticket.

The company said it was unaware of passengers returning positive Covid tests and staff who were on the flights had not yet been contacted by the NHS and asked to isolate.

A spokesman added: 'All our staff have also returned negative results from the mandatory PCR tests which we had on Tuesday 1st June.'

A Chelsea spokesman said: 'We are aware of reports and advise anyone contacted to follow the advice from NHS Test and Trace and Government guidelines.'

MailOnline has asked the Department of Health about the test and trace activities it is undertaking with passengers. 

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Mr Jenrick insisted a watchlist, where countries at risk of moving from the green to amber list are placed, is still an option.

'The watchlist system remains, if it's possible to do that,' Mr Jenrick told the Today programme.

'If you're seeing that cases are gradually rising, that positivity is increasing, then one may be able to use that and if you can, obviously it's preferable to do so because you want to give people and the industry that forward guidance.

'But if you're seeing new variants or versions of variants emerging, you may need to act more swiftly, and I think that is the right thing to do.'

Mr Jenrick said there were two reasons why Portugal was being moved from the green list of travel restrictions. He told Sky News: 'Firstly, the amount of positivity has increased significantly, it's doubled in the last three weeks to a level that's much higher than we have here in the UK.

'Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, although both countries have prevalence of the Indian variant or Delta variant as it's called, we're also seeing in Portugal now growing evidence of a further mutation being called the Nepal variant.

'We don't yet know how much of a problem that is, how transmissibility is, whether it might be too difficult even for our vaccines. But it's important that we take a cautious approach, and so we take action now whilst we do research and learn more about that variant.'

Mr Jenrick said although he appreciated the situation was 'frustrating', travellers had always been warned a country's classification could change.

He told Sky News: 'I completely understand how frustrating this is both for people in Portugal, and for millions of people here who would love to go on holiday abroad this summer.

'We were also clear that if you choose to go on holiday to countries on the green list, those countries are being reviewed every three weeks, and so there was always a risk with a fast-moving situation with new variants that countries might either go on to that list, or indeed come off.

'That's what's happened here and I hope that people will understand - hard though this is - that we do need to take a cautious approach because people have made such progress in recent weeks and months.'

Holidaymakers flying to Portugal lashed out at the 'shambolic' decision to take the destination off the green list and impose a 10-day quarantine period on their return.

At London Gatwick Airport today, a flight left for the Algarve at 8.30am. Those travelling on the easyJet flight expressed their disgust at having to pay for extra Covid tests and then quarantine for 10 days at the end of their holiday.

One couple said the extra costs for a two and eight day test and a third test to leave quarantine after five days had amounted to £1200- more than double the cost of their return flight to Faro.

'I am absolutely disgusted with what the Government has done' said David Roper. 'How can they tell us it is safe to travel, then three weeks later remove Portugal from the green list?

'With the PCR test we took to get the flight and all the other tests we now have to pay for on return it's added £1,200 to the cost. The fares were not cheap but it is ridiculous.'

Kathy Kirby, pictured at Gatwick today, had to pay a £99 change fee to return from her trip a day early and avoid the quarantine rule

Kathy Kirby, pictured at Gatwick today, had to pay a £99 change fee to return from her trip a day early and avoid the quarantine rule

Mr Roper and his wife Lydia, from Barnes, South West London, were flying to the Algarve for an eight day break. Many others on the flight were going to second homes in Portugal.

EasyJet staff at Gatwick's North Terminal said the early morning flight was ' not as busy as usual'.

'Usually every seat would be booked, but people are just not travelling and the terminal is so quiet' said a member of the check-in team.

'It's devastating for us as we just want to see people flying. If there are no flights out jobs are at risk. The Government seem intent on destroying our industry I feel sick every time they make an announcement about travel'.

Others on the Faro flight blamed the Government's U-turn on Chelsea and Manchester City fans who attended the European Cup final in Porto and were seen drinking and celebrating with no masks or social distancing.

'This is down to the football lot,' said one irate passenger. 'I now have to pay for the test to get out of quarantine after five days as I cannot afford to be off work for 10 days.

'Boris Johnson has got something right with the vaccines, but to keep chopping and changing what places we can go is madness. They either ban all travel or let people go away and know in advance have to quarantine on their return.

'It was too late to change my booking as I would have lost out. It's put me in a bad mood before I've even left'.

Friends Amy and Jade booked their £180 return flights to Faro on Wednesday - then 24 hours later had the grim news they must quarantine on their return and pay up to £400 each for Covid testing.

It means their five day trip to the popular resort of Albuferiao has worked out twice as expensive as they planned.

More than 112,000 Brits are on holiday in Portugal 

More than 112,000 Britons are on holiday in Portugal as it goes onto amber list, it has emerged. As of May 31, which is the most recent data available, 112,177 people from the UK are currently in the European country.

From May 17 until May 31, a total of 221,064 Britons travelled out to the country. As of May 31, the number of Brits who had travelled back from Portugal stood at 108,887. That leaves the 112,177 currently out there.

Conrad Poulson, chief executive officer at mobility data firm Huq Industries, said: 'Assuming the largest capacity Boeing 737 or equivalent can carry around 230 people that equates to around 487 flights to get every one of the remaining 108,887 people home.

'When you also factor in the five-day window before Portugal goes on the amber list, this rough calculation gives a sense of the scale of the issue for holidaymakers and those charged with getting them home.'

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Amy said: 'It's put a real dampener on the trip, but we will still try to enjoy ourselves. We booked at the last minute on Wednesday, then the following day we found out Portugal is no longer on the green list. I just think it's unfair.'

Jade added: 'We have already paid £200 for a PCR test to get the result on the same day. It's really annoying that we have to find more money for tests'

Kathy Kirby had to pay a £99 change fee to return from her trip a day early and avoid the quarantine rule.

She said: 'I had been planning to fly back Wednesday, but changed my flight to arrive a day early. The change will affect lots of people but nothing surprises me when it comes to this Government.'

Essex couple Josh and Sophie said they were resigned to paying hundreds of pounds for Covid tests having already paid £700 for their EasyJet flights.

As Josh works from home he will be able to quarantine without paying extra to be released after five days. Having waited so long for a family holiday with daughter Harriet, they were not going to let anything put them off.

Sophie said: 'We just want to get away. We have waited over a year for a holiday with our daughter Harriet and nothing is going to stop us.' Josh added: 'It is what it is. I work from home so can do the quarantine.'

Retired couple Desmond and Isabella Weal raged at the 'incompetence' of the Government's handling of travel.

'They really seem clueless and it does not make sense' said the 68-year-olds heading to Alvor. 'We are told it's all because of the Nepal variant but I read there was just one case in Portugal.

'It's is crazy to tell people they can go on holiday, then say it's not safe. I read there are 3,000 variants. When will this Government finally say we have to live with Covid and stop chopping and changing what we can and cannot do.'

At Stansted Airport this morning, Britons could not understand why transport chiefs changed their minds and said the system was failing.

Josh Clements, 29, who arrived back to London Stansted with his partner today after a holiday in Portugal, almost couldn't board his flight due to a government computer bungle

Josh Clements, 29, who arrived back to London Stansted with his partner today after a holiday in Portugal, almost couldn't board his flight due to a government computer bungle

Friends Esther-Leah Cohen, Judy Liebert, Tamar Smith and Ellie Sharer were arriving back at the airport after a girls' holiday in Porto.

The 21-year-old students did not have to rush back but said their Air BnB host had been hit with a string of cancellations from Brits.

Miss Liebert said: 'They are quite upset with that; I think they thought it was back to normal now. They really feel it is unfair as there are so few cases there, he thinks there are 50 there now.

'They wear masks outside there, we got told off quite a few times.

Miss Smith added: 'I'm not keen on the way they change the status, I don't think it is fair on businesses that rely on tourists.

'Also for Brits that need to go on holiday, people have been looking forward to this for a year. I'll be more cautious going away, we have already had a holiday cancelled before this.

'I thought that would be it it'd be green for ever. The tests didn't seem that good, they didn't even zoom in on the photos, I said we could have waved our GCSE results and it'd be fine.'

Their concerns were echoed by Josh Clements, 29, who had arrived back to London with his partner. The Londoner almost couldn't board his flight due to a government computer bungle.

'No one looked at our negative tests, no one looked at our lateral flow tests, no one looked at our PCR test,' he said.

'We almost couldn't fly back as they wouldn't let us on the plane as we couldn't fill out our passenger locater form, we couldn't do it because they wanted a booking reference number.

'They sent us an order confirmation rather than a booking reference and the government website wouldn't let us through. It was super stressful, they were saying we couldn't get on the plane even though we had the test.

Nikhil Rai, 25, a city business analyst who lives in a Canary Wharf apartment, was one of those disappointed Britons who cancelled their trips to Portugal today

Nikhil Rai, 25, a city business analyst who lives in a Canary Wharf apartment, was one of those disappointed Britons who cancelled their trips to Portugal today

'In the end we had to make up a reference number to fly home and no one looked at it, it was just like a quick glance. Last night we were up until 2am to get a lateral flow test.

'There was someone else at the hotel with the same issue as us, but no one was trying to beat the rush for Tuesday. We didn't see many British tourists.'

He added: 'No one checked it you could flash any old piece of paper, we were so worried about not getting on the flight. No one looked at mine, it was just box ticking.'

Andre Ferreira, 28, had returned home after seeing family for the first time in Portugal since the pandemic erupted with his partner Vanya Binho, 27.

He said: 'What is the point of it changing after the Champions League?! We just came back to the UK we are Portuguese citizens. It doesn't make any sense to us at all, after all the British citizens went there.

'The cases are not rising because of the flights or anything, even in the UK all the cases are increasing every day. I think it could have been handled better in Portugal and England too, it is all about politicians. Luckily we had booked the flight today or we would have been mad.

'This is the first time I have been home since the pandemic started, it is what it is that I can't see family due to the change. It was our choice to come to the UK to have a better life, but it is tough on the family.'

Nikhil Rai, 25, a city business analyst who lives in a skyscraper apartment at Canary Wharf was one of those disappointed Britons who cancelled their trips to Portugal today.

He said: 'I was going to a music festival near Faro with one of my cousins when suddenly Portugal was put on the Amber list.

'I was aware before they're going to Portugal was no easy exercise as one of my relatives was at the European champions final in Porto last weekend and told me how difficult things were.

'He said he had to have three PCR tests in total, filling in a complicated passenger locator form, and was grilled when he landed at Gatwick about his health and whether he'd booked all his PCR appointments and got negative covid results.

'It cost him £400 just to have those tests before during and after his trip to Porto. My cousin and I thought it was still worth going, just to have a break in the sunshine and see a live music festival. 

'The pandemic has worn me down and we just wanted to be allowed to be young guys again enjoying typical things like the beach, concerts and the sunshine. The hotel in Faro has been great and refunded our money. And the airline is going to keep our money, but give us credit so we can book again in the future.

'I know it's difficult for everyone, but this is a real hassle. It seems that everything is loaded against people going on holiday and I'm not happy about it, although I do understand people are nervous about Covid. I was really looking forward to a holiday in the sunshine, and it is particulary worse that it's raining today in London.

'My cousin Raj who is also 25 just graduated with an architecture degree and couldn't even have a graduation ceremony at his university. So we thought we'd celebrate by having a few cocktails in the sunshine and listen to some great music. That's all done now. Who knows when we'll finally be able to have a holiday?

'I feel sorry for those who are already out there and have to rush back today or this weekend. I wouldn't want to spend 10 days in a hotel and fork out all that money.'

Albufeira-based bar owner Mr Search, who is originally from Southend-on-Sea, runs his two bars with long-term partner Michelle Mundy, 51.  'We had our finger on the pulse and were more or less aware of what was going on but we really didn't think it would happen,' he said. 

As well as Portugal being moved to the amber list from Tuesday at 4am, seven countries are being shifted to the red list

As well as Portugal being moved to the amber list from Tuesday at 4am, seven countries are being shifted to the red list 

A Google Flights graph shows the cost of a single from Faro Airport to London soaring over the next four days, before falling

A Google Flights graph shows the cost of a single from Faro Airport to London soaring over the next four days, before falling

'Portugal is just slightly over the numbers and there's nothing in the Algarve at all. It's all up in Lisbon. For everyone in the Algarve, not just us but also the tourists, it's a complete nightmare.

Cheapest single flights from Faro to London 

  • Today -- £99 (Wizz Air to London Luton, 22:05)
  • Tomorrow -- £91 (EasyJet to London Gatwick, 22:15)
  • Sunday -- £172 (EasyJet to London Gatwick, 13:25)
  • Monday -- £258 (Wizz Air to London Luton, 21:05)

 Prices checked at 7am on Skyscanner

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'I think the problem for people even if they try to scrabble around for flights back home before the new rules kick in and they have to quarantine is going to be that they're tied to having Covid tests before they go and there's a two to three-day waiting lists because the Covid test centres here are overloaded.

'People need a Covid test to go home so they're not going to get it till Saturday or Sunday at the earliest which makes it impossible for those who can to rearrange their flights.

'Portugal has been the only major European holiday destination on the green list and we are in a very tourist area in Albufeira.

'Basically the last week has been like a summer for the first time since 2019. It's been great. We have a snack bar and we've been fully functioning.

'Now it's going to go down to literally nothing again, probably just a couple of hundred quid a day I would imagine and people are going to disappear this weekend. It's a disaster.' 

John Joyce, from Newcastle, and his family decided to book a holiday in sunny Portugal as soon as Britain added it to the green list of foreign destinations around three weeks ago.

'Everybody needed a little break... a change from being stuck at home,' the 44-year-old said as he enjoyed a beer at a restaurant in the heart of Lisbon.

Jet2 cancels ALL international flights and holidays until July 1 and EasyJet 'reviews' flights to Portugal after it was put on amber list amid chaos over foreign travel rules 

Jet2 has cancelled all international flights and holidays up to July 1 and Easyjet will 'review' its flights in the wake of traffic light chaos as Portugal is pulled from the green list.

The UK's second largest tour operator originally suspended its services up to June 24 when the green list was announced.

But now all flights for this month have been cancelled amid a spate of changes - including moving Portugal, Madeira and the Azores to the amber list.

Flights to Turkey, which is on the red list of the Government's traffic light system, will be held until July 22 as the restrictions look unlikely to ease.

Jet2 boss Steve Heapy blasted the Government for confusion surrounding the last-minute changes. He called for 'openness and transparency' on coronavirus data so that the industry could better understand decisions affecting airlines and their customers.

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Portugal was the only big beach destination placed on the list, which allowed Britons to travel there without needing to quarantine when returning home. Like Joyce, thousands packed their bags.

Reacting to developments yesterday, though, Mr Joyce said: 'It's a bit unfair. There are families bringing out kids and people who booked their holidays already... and the stress involved for people, including myself.'

Charlotte Cheddle, 22, echoed the same feelings, urging the British government to either 'ban international travel completely or communicate properly with people'.

'It's silly,' she said. 'We made an effort to get tested privately... We paid for everything and we have done everything to make it safe.' 

British families in Portugal now face spending £1,000 for which they have not budgeted to buy PCR tests to get home. Upon returning to the UK, they will have to complete two tests on Days 2 and 8. 

Portugal has lifted most of its lockdown restrictions. The government has been heavily criticised for allowing thousands of mainly maskless English football to party in Porto during the Champions League final last weekend.  

The British government's decision is a huge blow for Portugal's tourism sector, which represents a significant chunk of GDP and has Britain as one of its biggest foreign markets.

'It's not great for businesses but slowly we will get there - or at least I really hope so because our economy is down,' said restaurant manager Ana Paula Gomes in Lisbon.

The head of the hotels' association in the touristy Algarve region, Eliderico Viegas, said Britain's move would hit the sector like a 'bucket of cold water'.

João Fernandes, President of Algarve Tourism, speaking in his first comments since the UK announcement, said: 'As you can imagine we are bitterly disappointed to be moved to the amber list. 

'In the Algarve region we host two thirds of the British overnight hotel stays in Portugal. And since the start of the pandemic the Algarve has had the lowest number of cases and better indicators than the rest of the country.  

'Furthermore, Portugal has one of the highest levels of pandemic control and prevention in the EU, according to indicators in the latest ECDC (European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control) report.

'I've never seen the travel industry so angry'

Speaking from Gibraltar, travel expert Simon Calder told ITV's Good Morning Britain today: 'On this occasion I have never seen the travel industry so angry.

'Here I am in beautiful Gibraltar, it's the last country standing, the only country meaningfully where you can actually go on holiday without too many restrictions and come back. It's the only Mediterranean destination on the green list.

Travel expert Simon Calder, pictured in Gibraltar this morning

Travel expert Simon Calder, pictured in Gibraltar this morning

'There are fewer than 94 hours remaining for tens of thousands of British holidaymakers in Portugal to get out if they want to avoid ten days of quarantine when they get back. Air fares are going through the roof.

'On top of that, the travel industry is in utter despair because they thought they would have Portugal, then that would gradually build and then quite soon Spain.

'But instead the Government have effectively not just moved the goalposts on how these things are decided, but uprooted them and moved them to an entirely different arena.'

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'The millions of Brits that visit us each year contribute to the livelihoods of many people in the region.

'Our hotels, tour operators and airline partners will also once again be put in a difficult situation, trying to plan around these ever-changing rules.

'For holidaymakers it is an impossible situation trying to book a holiday overseas, and I sympathise with those that were looking forward to visiting our beautiful region for a well-deserved break.

'We hope they will re-arrange their holiday to the Algarve for later in the year rather than cancel completely.'  

Alfonso Rodriguez Badal, mayor of the municipality of Calvia which includes the popular British holiday resort of Magaluf, said the decision to keep the Balearic Islands on amber was a 'surprise.' 

He added: 'It's also obviously a disappointment.

'We were confident we would go onto a green light rating because we understood people here had made a real effort to get our accumulated coronavirus rate down to a very low level to make us one of the safest if not the safest Mediterranean resort.

'Therefore we felt this could give the UK enough confidence to let holidaymakers come here without imposing restrictions on their return.

'It hasn't happened but we are going to continue working towards achieving this and we are confident and hope that the next UK government revision will lead to Calvia and the Balearic Islands and the rest of Spain as well if it can happen, being given that green traffic light rating that will facilitate the arrivals of more tourists here.' 

Iago Negueruela, regional Tourism Minister for the Balearic Islands which was hoping to be the sole Spanish region to be put on the UK's green traffic light system, said he viewed the decision as that of a 'sovereign state focused on its own domestic health situation' in light of the June 21 Freedom Day date.

He added: 'At the moment practically no Mediterranean holiday destination is open for the UK. We respect the British government's decision.

'Given the good vaccination rate in the UK if we can go onto a green rating in the next UK government revision, we'll be in line with the estimations of the major tour operators like TUI and Jet2 who had said they would restart their operations towards the end of June.

'The British market is a very important market for us and we hope to recover it towards the end of this month.' 

UK holidaymakers scramble to cancel their planned trips to Portugal ahead of the Tuesday deadline, with some revealing they are knocking overseas holidays on the head this year

UK holidaymakers scramble to cancel their planned trips to Portugal ahead of the Tuesday deadline, with some revealing they are knocking overseas holidays on the head this year

Eduardo Jesus, the Regional Secretary for Culture and Tourism of Madeira, called the UK decision to demote it to amber 'unfair and completely inadequate.' 

Man City and Chelsea fans told to self-isolate after Porto final 

Hundreds of Manchester City and Chelsea fans who travelled to Portugal for the Champions League final last weekend have been ordered to self-isolate for 10 days - with the country axed from the UK's Green List.  

Supporters who travelled on a Ryanair flight from Porto to Manchester on Sunday morning have been contacted by the NHS's Test and Trace app - though the number of positive cases is unknown. 

Three planeloads of Chelsea fans were also asked to self-isolate, leading to fears that all 12,000 supporters who travelled to Lisbon could be affected. Both clubs organised flights for their supporters - though some travelled independently. 

Fans who were on the flights organised by the club shared details of messages from the NHS Track and Trace app which contacts people who have been in close contact with someone who has Covid-19.

'Anyone else been captured by NHS track and trace since getting back from Porto?' one supporter posted on Facebook. 'Despite two vaccinations, a negative test and no symptoms I've got to self-isolate for 10 days ...Deep Joy!'

Chelsea fans were offered a £199 travel package through the club on top of the cost of the match ticket, although some of their 6,000 supporters chose to travel to the country independently.  

Football fans celebrating Sporting Lisbon's title win were also identified as potential causes. 

Portugal's government has kept bars and night clubs closed and still recommend people working from home but the country has now lost its place on the UK's 'green list'.  

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He said: 'We are already reacting with the British government, presenting a set of arguments we believe are valid, and pointing out that this decision is totally incorrect for Madeira, inadequate and above all, very unfair.' 

He told local press: 'The reality of Madeira has been different from the national reality for a long time, with a model adopted here for controlling entry and monitoring citizens throughout their stay in the region. 

'Furthermore, it is important to bear in mind that Madeira is in a much more advanced state with regard to the vaccination process than mainland Portugal and this is also a factor of confidence, not only for those who live here, but also for those who visit us.

'The risk of British citizens traveling to Madeira is reduced by the fact that the overwhelming number of passengers come on direct flights.' 

UK holidaymakers revealed they are planning on cancelling their trips to the country while others said they will not bother going abroad this summer.

One Twitter user said: 'I'm due to fly to Portugal on Sunday for 7 days, so will be green when I go and amber on return? Will my holiday still go ahead??'

Another tweeted: '17 days Portugal has been on the green list. How the hell is anyone going to have the confidence to book a foreign holiday? I certainly won't be whilst this traffic light system is in place.'

One person wrote: '@jet2tweets what are our options now with Portugal going amber? Supposed to be going in 3 weeks'. Another said: 'It looks liuke my summer holiday is gone, so this week in Portugal is a god send'. 

On Twitter user added: 'Would be funny if I hadn't flown to Portugal this morning'. 

It comes as travel industry leaders blasted the Government's 'crippling' and 'confusing' decision to axe Portugal from its green list of safe destinations amid growing concern over the Nepal coronavirus variant. 

In a statement to MailOnline, package holiday firm TUI UK called the announcement 'another step back for our industry' and demanded to see the scientific basis for the decision.

Its managing director, Andrew Flintham, said: 'After promises that the Global Travel Taskforce would result in a clear framework, removing the damaging flip flopping we all endured last summer, the Government decision to move Portugal straight from green to amber will do untold damage to customer confidence. 

'We were reassured that a green watch list would be created and a weeks' notice would be given so travellers wouldn't have to rush back home. They have failed on this promise. 

Holidaymakers suffered a hammer blow as Portugal was removed from the UK's green list with Grant Shapps citing fears over the spread of the Nepal variant

Holidaymakers suffered a hammer blow as Portugal was removed from the UK's green list with Grant Shapps citing fears over the spread of the Nepal variant

Britain recorded more than 5,000 Covid cases for the first time in more than two months while 18 more people died from the virus

Britain recorded more than 5,000 Covid cases for the first time in more than two months while 18 more people died from the virus

'Unlike other European countries and despite multiple requests, the government has refused to be transparent about the data requirements for green, amber and red destinations. 

'Everybody needs a break': British sunseekers react with fury and disbelief as No10 moves Portugal to amber list of nations 

Tired of mixed messages, British sunseekers in Portugal reacted with fury and disbelief to their government's decision to reimpose a quarantine regime for travellers coming from the popular southern European destination.

Desperate to shake off pandemic blues, John Joyce, from Newcastle, and his family decided to book a holiday in sunny Portugal as soon as Britain added it to the so-called green list of foreign destinations around three weeks ago.

'Everybody needed a little break... a change from being stuck at home,' the 44-year-old said as he enjoyed a beer at a restaurant in the heart of Lisbon.

Portugal was the only big beach destination placed on the list, which allowed Britons to travel there without needing to quarantine when returning home. Like Joyce, thousands packed their bags.

But on Thursday Britain shifted Portugal to its amber list due to rising COVID-19 case numbers and the risk of a mutation of the virus variant first discovered in India.

'It's a bit unfair,' Joyce said. 'There are families bringing out kids and people who booked their holidays already...and the stress involved for people, including myself,' a visibly annoyed Joyce said.

Charlotte Cheddle, a 22-year-old from England, echoed the same feelings, urging the British government to either 'ban international travel completely or communicate properly with people'.

'It's silly,' said Cheddle, who will now have to quarantine for 10 days when she flies back. 'We made an effort to get tested privately...We paid for everything and we have done everything to make it safe.'

Portugal has lifted most of its lockdown restrictions. The government has been heavily criticised for allowing thousands of mainly maskless English football to party in Porto during the Champions League final last weekend.

Some locals worried it could fuel a spike in cases.

The country of just over 10 million people reported 769 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday, the highest daily increase since early April. Total infections now stand at 851,031.

The British government's decision is a huge blow for Portugal's tourism sector, which represents a significant chunk of GDP and has Britain as one of its biggest foreign markets.

'It's not great for businesses but slowly we will get there - or at least I really hope so because our economy is down,' said restaurant manager Ana Paula Gomes in Lisbon.

The head of the hotels' association in the touristy Algarve region, Eliderico Viegas, said Britain's move would hit the sector like a 'bucket of cold water'.

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'We must see the methodology so we can help our customers and plan our operations accordingly. There are destinations around the world with little or no Covid-19 cases and good vaccination rates, so we need to understand why these remain on the amber list.'

EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren said: 'This shock decision to add Portugal to the Amber list is a huge blow to those who are currently in Portugal and those who have booked to be reunited with loved ones, or take a well-deserved break this summer. 

'With Portuguese rates similar to those in the UK it simply isn't justified by the science.

'And to add no more countries to the Green list when most of Europe's infection rates are on a downward trend and many places with low infection rates below that of the UK, such as the Balearics with a current rate of 33 in 100,000 and Malta, with just 12 in 100,000, this makes no sense. 

'Especially when domestic travel is allowed within the UK, despite a number of cities having infection rates 20 times greater than much of Europe.

'When this framework was put together, consumers were promised a waiting list to allow them to plan. Yet the Government has torn up its own rule book and ignored the science, throwing peoples' plans into chaos, with virtually no notice or alternative options for travel from the UK. 

'This decision essentially cuts the UK off from the rest of the world.

'We have demonstrated that a safe reopening of travel is possible as our study with leading epidemiologists from the Yale School of Public Health showed that the criteria which matters most is the impact on hospitalisation rates back in the UK, not the infection rates in destination. 

'Reopening travel to much of Europe would have a negligible impact on hospitalisation rates in the UK.

'While our European fleet is gearing up for summer as European governments open up travel for their citizens, the UK government is making it impossible for airlines to plan while consumers are left grounded in UK.' 

Shares in easyJet, British Airways-owner IAG and Jet2 were down five per cent on fears that Europe would lose another peak travel season, when millions of Britons usually head to southern Europe in July and August.

Ryanair and TUI, which has a big German customer base as well as British, lost four per cent.

Data provided by Cirium showed that Ryanair and easyJet had been scheduled to operate more than 500 flights from the UK to Portugal in June. The airlines had all added flights to the country in May.

The industry is already weakened by 15 months of lockdowns, forcing it to cut tens of thousands of jobs and take on debt, and it will be severely challenged if there is no reopening this summer.

The news is also likely to sound the alarm in France, Spain, Greece and Italy where thousands of jobs rely on the arrival of high-spending British tourists each summer.

Portugal's foreign ministry said it did not understand the 'logic' behind the decision. 

'We took note of Britain's decision to remove Portugal from the green list,' the ministry said on Twitter, adding that it would continue to ease its lockdown rules 'gradually'. 

No countries are being added to the 'green list', dashing hopes that places such as Malta, Jamaica and Grenada could be added to the roster thanks to easing Covid rates.

And more countries are being put on the 'red list' that means returning travellers must go into quarantine hotels. They are Egypt, Sri Lanka, Costa Rica, Bahrain, Sudan, Trinidad and Tobago and Afghanistan.  

Mr Shapps said there had been a rise in test positivity in Portugal, and also pointed to the danger that the coronavirus variant linked to Nepal could pose a fresh threat to the escape from lockdown. 

Summer holidays plunged into chaos: No green light for thousands of families and £2billion wiped off airlines as Shapps insists: 'Nepalese mutant gave us no choice' 

Britons' hopes of foreign holidays abroad this summer were plunged into turmoil last night.

On a devastating day for the travel industry, ministers shrank the number of countries on the quarantine-free green list and downgraded Portugal.

Amid fears over new variants, several popular holiday destinations that had hoped to 'go green' were rejected, while seven more countries were added to the strict red list.

Portugal (pictured: A beach in Cascais near Lisbon) has been dropped from the UK's travel green list

Portugal (pictured: A beach in Cascais near Lisbon) has been dropped from the UK's travel green list

It leaves Gibraltar as the only realistic holiday destination which Britons can visit quarantine-free. Most of the ten other green-list countries have strict entry requirements, or an outright ban on Britons visiting for holidays.

Ministers appeared to signal last night that foreign travel had effectively been sacrificed to give Britain the best chance of lifting all Covid restrictions on June 21. Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said the 'decisive action' would help 'make sure that we can do a domestic unlock'.

But it triggered fury from travel industry chiefs, who accused the Government of trying to 'isolate' Britain from the world and warned that another 'lost summer' could lead to a jobs bloodbath and billions more being wiped from the economy.

Figures compiled for the Mail by the all-party Future of Aviation group of MPs last night projected that the cost to the economy could be as much as £11.5billion in outbound travel alone if the current restrictions remain through the next three months. Meanwhile, fears were raised for the 1.6million jobs the aviation, travel and tourism creates.

Yesterday's developments wiped more than £2billion off the value of UK-listed travel and airline firms on the London stock exchange. British Airways owner IAG, easyJet, Ryanair, TUI, Wizz Air and engine maker Rolls-Royce all suffered heavy falls as news spread that no countries would be added to the green list.

And in a sign of the despair gripping the industry, package holiday giant Jet2 cancelled all foreign holidays until July 1 – three days after the next review of the green list is due.

The decision to remove Portugal from the green list was particularly controversial and sparked a diplomatic row last night, with the country's president accusing UK ministers of 'health fundamentalism'.

Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa also accused the Government of being overly 'obsessed' with infection rates, rather than focusing on his country's low hospital admissions and death rate.

It also sparked a scramble among the British holidaymakers already in Portugal who now have to decide whether to cut short their holidays and dash back by 4am on Tuesday before the amber-list restrictions kick in.

And thousands more who booked to go to there in the coming weeks were left in limbo over whether to re-book or seek refunds.

There was also anger at ministers moving Portugal straight to amber rather than putting it on the 'watchlist'. This would have kept the country green for a bit longer while warning travellers it could turn amber.

The Mail can reveal that Mr Shapps and Health Secretary Matt Hancock clashed over the issue of holidays at a crunch Cabinet meeting yesterday.

Mr Hancock was said to have rejected calls for any new low-risk destinations going green and even argued that Portugal shouldn't go on the 'amber watchlist'.

He was also said to have pushed back firmly against Malta being added to the green list, despite its very low infection and high vaccination rates. But another source played down the row, saying the pair have 'a very good working relationship but occasionally have a difference in perspective'.

It came after the Mail yesterday revealed that ministers had been warned by scientists about the emergence of the new 'Nepal variant' being detected in holiday hotspots.

Mr Shapps confirmed yesterday that the emergence of the variant contributed to a stripped-down green list, with the infection rate in Portugal – where cases of the variant have been detected – 'nearly doubling' in recent weeks.

But travel industry leaders warned that consumer confidence will be 'destroyed' now they know how quickly countries can be downgraded. Heathrow chief John Holland-Kaye said: 'Ministers spent last month hailing the restart of international travel, only to close it down three weeks later, all but guaranteeing another lost summer for the travel sector.'

Acting general secretary of the BALPA union, Brian Strutton, said: 'This decision is a total disaster for the already fragile travel industry and is likely to lead to further airline failures and many more job losses.

'Any shred of public confidence is in tatters and the traffic light system seems stuck on red. Our airlines need this summer season if they are to survive.'

Paul Charles, chief executive of travel consultancy The PC Agency, said last night: 'This decision will further threaten tens of thousands of jobs in aviation and travel, not to mention further damage consumer confidence.

'The data shows several countries should be green so the Government's decision defies logic. Summer is being squeezed by a policy of fear.'

Labour MP Yvette Cooper, chairman of the home affairs committee, added: 'The Government put Portugal on the green list only two and a half weeks ago, encouraging people to book holidays, and now they have had to reverse their decision, citing new variants and the impact on the timetable for lifting domestic restrictions.

'This is a completely chaotic way to make important public health decisions and is causing confusion for everyone.'

 

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'I want to be straight with people, it's actually a difficult decision to make, but in the end we've seen two things really which caused concern,' he said. 

'One is the positivity rate has nearly doubled since the last review in Portugal and the other is there's a sort of Nepal mutation of the so-called Indian variant which has been detected and we just don't know the potential for that to be a vaccine-defeating mutation, and simply don't want to take the risk as we come up to June 21 and the review of the fourth stage of the unlock.' 

However, a British Airways spokesperson called the decision 'incredibly disappointing' and 'confusing', adding: 'The UK has reached a critical point and urgently needs travel with low-risk countries, like the US, to restart the economy, support devastated industries and reunite loved ones. 

'With high levels of vaccinations in the UK being matched by other countries, we should see the UK Government adding destinations to 'green' as soon as possible - not turning its back on a traffic light model which we were led to believe was based firmly on scientific data.'

Heathrow chief executive John Holland-Kaye reacted with fury this afternoon, saying: 'Ministers spent last month hailing the restart of international travel, only to close it down three weeks later all but guaranteeing another lost summer for the travel sector.

'Everyone wants to protect public health, but the entire point of the Global Travel Taskforce was to establish a system to unlock low-risk travel safely.

'Britain is the worst performing economy in the G7, and in the week that the Prime Minister hosts G7 leaders to launch his Government's vision of Global Britain, he's sending a message that the UK will remain isolated from the rest of the world and closed to most of its G7 partners.

'If the Government is serious about protecting UK jobs and supporting businesses across the country, rapid action is needed to reopen flights to key trading partners, remove testing for vaccinated passengers from 'green' countries, and slash the cost and complexity of testing, as other G7 countries are doing.'

Gatwick Airport boss Stewart Wingate told MailOnline:  'It is bitterly disappointing news for our impacted passengers and airlines that Portugal is to be added to the 'amber' list from next week while no further destinations are being opened up for 'green' travel.' 

The chief executive of Manchester Airports Group, Charlie Cornish, accused the Government of 'scapegoating' international travel and risking tens of thousands of jobs.

He told MailOnline: 'We were told the traffic light system would allow people to travel safely, with the right measures in place to manage risk for different countries.

'But it is now clear the Government doesn't trust its own system and that international travel is being unfairly scapegoated, with tens of thousands of jobs placed at risk in the process.

'Low-risk destinations continue to be left off the green list despite clear evidence they are safe to visit. With case rates lower than the UK, we simply cannot understand why the likes of the Balearics, the Canaries and some Greek islands do not fall into that category.

'If we followed the approach being taken across Europe, lots of other countries - like the United States, Germany and Italy - would also be classed as green. Instead, we're stuck with a system that is clearly not fit for purpose and will deny people the opportunity to travel abroad safely this year. 

'The lack of transparency is shocking and totally unacceptable. If the Government has information that supports its decisions, then it needs to publish it. We have repeatedly asked for this data, but we are being left in the dark about how it is making these choices, with no opportunity for scrutiny or challenge.

'That is not the way to go about limiting people's freedoms and crippling the country's travel and tourism sectors. 

'With so much at stake, we need immediate transparency and urgent action to make this system of travel restrictions fit for purpose.'

Paul Charles, chief executive of The PC Agency, suggested the Government was motivated by 'political' considerations rather than public health. 

On the decision not to add any more countries to the green travel list he said: 'I think it's a terrible decision that threatens jobs and recovery in the travel sector.

'It shows little awareness of the safe destinations globally and is at odds with how citizens from other countries such as America are travelling. Those British citizens who have been fully jabbed should be given more flexibility to travel to a wider range of green destinations.

'They are basically putting at risk tens of thousands of jobs across aviation and the travel sector, and not showing any signs of helping the sector to recover. They seem to want to continue to create an atmosphere of fear among travellers, which is totally at odds with other countries.

'There are several countries which meet the criteria to be on the green list so this is clearly a politically charged decision rather than one based on data.'

ABTA travel association boss Mark Tanzer said: 'It's clear that the Government's domestic health strategy is continuing to prevent any meaningful resumption of international travel. 

'You can't build the recovery of a multi-billion-pound sector while mass market holiday destinations remain off the green list. The removal of Portugal comes on the back on what was already a very short and cautious green list.

'Travel agents and tour operators haven't been able to generate income since the start of the pandemic and have been depending on the return of international travel to help bring in some much needed relief.

'The Government now needs to come forward with tailored financial support for the sector, which recognises that the travel industry's recovery will be slower than that in other sectors of the economy, and takes account of the unique challenges businesses in the sector are facing.

'Travel companies are desperately worried that at a time when the market hasn't opened up they will shortly face increased furlough and business rates costs, with support being gradually withdrawn from the end of this month. 

'It's vital that the Government doesn't leave these businesses behind as it focuses on the domestic unlocking.' 

Steven Freudmann, chairman of Institute of Travel and Tourism, told MailOnline: 'It's an absolute hammer blow to the industry. The EU is about to bring in 'green passes' for anyone in the EU to travel freely around Europe, subject to their having been vaccinated or having tested negative.

'The UK is in real danger of shrinking into splendid isolation whilst at the same time seeing its travel industry die a death of a thousand cuts.

'The Government delayed 14 days before adding India to the red list, allowing 20,000 people who could have been carrying the new coronavirus strain into the UK. There is just no consistency.' 

TUI UK boss Andrew Flintham
EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren

TUI UK boss Andrew Flintham (left) called the announcement 'another step back for our industry'. EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren (right) said: 'This shock decision to add Portugal to the Amber list is a huge blow to those who are currently in Portugal and those who have booked to be reunited with loved ones, or take a well-deserved break this summer'

In Portugal, Joao Fernandes, President of the Algarve Tourist Board, described the UK decision to downgrade Portugal from green to amber as a 'severe setback.' 

Jab should give freedom, not timorous isolation... This decision to add seven more countries to the red list is a savage blow to the travel sector, writes Easyjet boss JOHAN LUNDGREN 

By Johan Lundgren, CEO of easyJet, for The Daily Mail

After all the misery inflicted by the Covid pandemic, the travel industry desperately needed a shot in the arm.

Instead it has just been given a kick in the teeth.

At the very moment that Britain should be opening up, given that the virus is in retreat, the Government has decided to impose more restrictions.

In a depressing step backwards, it was announced yesterday that seven additional countries are joining the red list of high-risk destinations, including such popular hotspots such as Egypt, Sri Lanka and Trinidad.

Even more regrettably, the Government has actually removed Portugal from the green list of countries where journeys can be made without any requirements for quarantining and self-isolation.

This decision is a savage blow to the sector and to thousands of Britons, who are either in Portugal at the moment or had booked trips to go there soon.

Some will lose money, others will have holiday plans ruined – and for what? 

The exclusion of Portugal makes no sense and is wholly unjustified by science, since the country's rates of Covid infection are much the same as the United Kingdom's.

Nor is there any sign of disease beginning to surge again in Portugal, with hospital admissions and deaths at extremely low levels.

Indeed, the whole current system is riddled with gross inconsistencies and anomalies.

The British Government pledged to give special consideration to European islands, but that looks like another broken promise.

The Balearic Islands off Spain have a current Covid infection rate of just 33 per 100,000 people – significantly lower than the 50 per 100,000 in Britain – yet they remain on the amber list.

Similarly, restrictions still apply to Malta, where the infection rate is just 12 per 100,000. 

The reality is that, with the Covid crisis now rapidly diminishing throughout the continent, nearly all of Europe could be put on the British Government's green list and such a step would not have any negative impact on the United Kingdom.

The absurdity of the Government's stance is further highlighted by the fact that there are no restraints on domestic travel by car, train or air around Britain, yet a number of places badly affected by the Delta variant have far more serious Covid problems than most of Europe.

Yesterday's decision makes a mockery of the political rhetoric which promised that the vaccine programme would bring back normality and freedom. 

The jabs were meant to allow us back to the beaches of Spain and villages of France.

Yesterday, an important milestone was reached as more than half of the adult British population has now received two doses. 

Shouldn't that have been the cue for great travel liberation rather than more tightening?

It is highly unconvincing of the Government to argue that caution is needed because of the risk from new variants. That is a recipe for a permanent shutdown. 

As the distinguished Oxford professor Sir John Bell put it this week: 'If we scamper down the rabbit hole every time we see a new variant, we are going to spend a long time huddled away.'

If ministers think that Britons should not travel, then they should be honest, instead of presiding over endless chaos that wrecks plans, promotes frustration and damages business. 

But rather than being gripped by fear, they should look across to Europe where Governments are embracing openness.

Typical is the Netherlands, which allows unrestricted travel, without any further tests, both for anyone who has been fully vaccinated or anyone comes from a country that has an infection of less than 150 per 100,000.

Britain's ill-conceived approach is costing the airline industry millions of pounds. Jobs are being lost, livelihoods destroyed. 

This month alone, 1,800 flights were due to depart from Britain for Portugal. In light of the green list decision, many of those will now have to be withdrawn.

In one sense my own company of easyJet is lucky, in that 50 per cent of our operations are outside Europe.

Even so, like the rest of the industry, we have been badly affected.

A radical change in thinking is needed.

Brexit, we were told, was a great opportunity for Britain to take its place on the global stage as a buccaneering, ambitious nation.

That chance is now being squandered as ministers pull us into timorous isolation. 

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He told Portuguese press: 'We had a very robust and growing demand for the coming weeks from the British market, with flights increasing their capacity and hotel reservations consolidating.' 

Speaking just before the announcement was made public he added: 'It's obvious any change will have a very significant impact on the Algarve.

'Data from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control has just come out which places us among the three countries in Europe with the lowest accumulated incidence of coronavirus in the last 14 days per 100,000 inhabitants.

'Before coming to Portugal a British tourist has to do a PCR test. In a European context Britain has the most advanced vaccination programme.'   

Alfonso Rodriguez Badal, mayor of the municipality of Calvia which includes the popular British holiday resort of Magaluf, said the decision to keep the Balearic Islands on amber was a 'surprise.' He added: 'It's also obviously a disappointment.

'We were confident we would go onto a green light rating because we understood people here had made a real effort to get our accumulated coronavirus rate down to a very low level to make us one of the safest if not the safest Mediterranean resort.

'Therefore we felt this could give the UK enough confidence to let holidaymakers come here without imposing restrictions on their return.

'It hasn't happened but we are going to continue working towards achieving this and we are confident and hope that the next UK government revision will lead to Calvia and the Balearic Islands and the rest of Spain as well if it can happen, being given that green traffic light rating that will facilitate the arrivals of more tourists here.' 

Iago Negueruela, regional Tourism Minister for the Balearic Islands which was hoping to be the sole Spanish region to be put on the UK's green traffic light system, said he viewed the decision as that of a 'sovereign state focused on its own domestic health situation' in light of the June 21 Freedom Day date.

He added: 'At the moment practically no Mediterranean holiday destination is open for the UK. We respect the British government's decision.

'Given the good vaccination rate in the UK if we can go onto a green rating in the next UK government revision, we'll be in line with the estimations of the major tour operators like TUI and Jet2 who had said they would restart their operations towards the end of June.

'The British market is a very important market for us and we hope to recover it towards the end of this month.'

Eduardo Jesus, the Regional Secretary for Culture and Tourism of Madeira, called the UK decision to demote it to amber 'unfair and completely inadequate.' 

He said: 'We are already reacting with the British government, presenting a set of arguments we believe are valid, and pointing out that this decision is totally incorrect for Madeira, inadequate and above all, very unfair.' 

He told local press: 'The reality of Madeira has been different from the national reality for a long time, with a model adopted here for controlling entry and monitoring citizens throughout their stay in the region.  

'Furthermore, it is important to bear in mind that Madeira is in a much more advanced state with regard to the vaccination process than mainland Portugal and this is also a factor of confidence, not only for those who live here, but also for those who visit us.

'The risk of British citizens traveling to Madeira is reduced by the fact that the overwhelming number of passengers come on direct flights.'  

UK holidaymakers revealed they are planning on cancelling their trips to the country while others said they will not bother going abroad this summer.

One Twitter user said: 'I'm due to fly to Portugal on Sunday for 7 days, so will be green when I go and amber on return? Will my holiday still go ahead??'

Another tweeted: '17 days Portugal has been on the green list. How the hell is anyone going to have the confidence to book a foreign holiday? I certainly won't be whilst this traffic light system is in place.'

One person wrote: '@jet2tweets what are our options now with Portugal going amber? Supposed to be going in 3 weeks'.

Another said: 'It looks liuke my summer holiday is gone, so this week in Portugal is a god send'. Another added: 'Would be funny if I hadn't flown to Portugal this morning'.

The Government said the decision to move Portugal to the amber list followed an 'almost doubling' in the country's coronavirus test positivity rate and the discovery of 68 cases of the Indian variant including some with a mutation previously seen in Nepal.

Public Health England is investigating both the Indian variant and the mutation 'to better understand whether it could be more transmissible and less effectively tackled by vaccines'.  

Mr Shapps said 'decisive action' will help 'make sure that we can do a domestic unlock'.

'We would expect in the ordinary course of events for there to be now a three-week period, obviously subject to if something dramatic comes up we would of course need to make changes elsewhere and we will have to reserve the right to do that to protect the population at home.

'Look, 67million people have been through a lot this last year and a half, but a lot of people have come forward for their jabs in incredible numbers.

'No one wants the government to fail to take decisive action to protect that as we look towards this fourth unlock, and we want to give ourselves the best possible chance when we get to that unlock and not have factors from outside - for example potentially vaccine defeating mutation - preventing us from being able to give ourselves the best chance of unlocking domestically.'

Passengers arrive at Faro airport in the Algarve in the south of Portugal on May 17

Passengers arrive at Faro airport in the Algarve in the south of Portugal on May 17

Mr Shapps said the UK had 'done wonders with our vaccination programme and the rest of the world will catch up'.

Nepal variant 'could have been spread by Everest climbers' 

 

A coronavirus variant that is being linked to Nepal could have been spread by climbers travelling home from Mount Everest, experts say.

As many as 13 passengers flying from Nepal to Japan were infected with the new mutant strain that combines mutations from the Indian and South African variants. 

At least 43 cases have been spotted in the UK, MailOnline revealed today, with the strain first spotted on April 24 according to surveillance data. Cases were also detected in the US, India and Portugal. 

Its mutations mean scientists fear it could be more infectious, and more resistant to vaccines. 

Matt Hancock said yesterday Britain is preparing to buy millions of tweaked doses of the AstraZeneca jab that target the South African variant.

SAGE scientists think it makes jabs at least 30 per cent less effective against infections, but its impact on severe disease is not known.

Ministers sparked surge testing in postcode areas where the strain was detected, to root out every last case.

At least one case has been spotted in Portugal, which sources say will move to the 'amber' list today sparking holiday misery across the country.

Only one case of the variant has been recorded in Nepal so far, but the country carries out very little surveillance for mutant strains. The UK has placed Nepal and India on its 'red' list, and the US is on its 'amber' list. 

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'Europe is probably 10 weeks behind but they will catch up and I don't know exactly what that will mean in terms of the summer but the decisive action today is designed to protect the future, to make sure that we can do a domestic unlock or give ourselves the best possible chance of doing so and that will also help us to unlock international travel given time,' he added.

'So we're not in the same place as last year, we've got the vaccination programme, we do need to check though that the vaccine can work against all the kinds of mutations that we're seeing and so we're having to take a safety first attitude when it comes to those mutations becoming apparent.'

With Portugal facing a shift to the amber list after ministers meet today, people returning from the country will have to self-isolate for 10 days as well as paying for coronavirus tests. 

It will be a huge kick in the teeth to Britons who have already booked a holiday in hot spots such as the Algarve, believing they will be able to return quarantine free.

And it will also be another damaging blow to the already struggling travel industry, which had hoped for more countries to be added to the green list this month. 

Yesterday Portugal saw its highest daily number of cases since March. And the country currently has a case rate of around 37 infections per 100,000 people - higher than the UK's rate of 34.5.

The final decisions were based on an assessment from the Joint Biosecurity Centre (JBC).

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the priority was 'keeping the country safe'. 

'We have got to follow the data and of course, I understand why people want to travel but we've got to make sure we keep this country safe, especially because the vaccine programme is going so well,' he told reporters at a G7 gathering in Oxford this morning. 

'We have seen hospitalisations and deaths come right down and we have to got to protect the progress we have made here at home, whilst allowing for travel where it is safe.

'You have got to follow the data.' 

Mr Johnson hinted at a hard line when he was asked about expanding the green list yesterday, and said: 'We're going to try to allow people to travel, as I know that many people want to, but we've got to be cautious and we've got to continue to put countries on the red list, on the amber list, when that is necessary.

'I want you to know we will have no hesitation in moving countries from the green list to the amber list to the red list, if we have to do so. 

'The priority is to continue the vaccination rollout, to protect the people of this country.'

In the past, holiday-makers have normally been given days - and sometimes up to a week - to return to the UK from countries where travel restrictions have been changed.

The government has ignored pressure for other countries such as Malta to be added to the green list.

The Mediterranean island, a popular destination for British tourists, is currently on the amber list, but has high vaccination levels and low infections.

The Cayman Islands, Grenada, British Virgin Islands, Finland and some Caribbean islands were also among those being floated for the green list. 

Cyprus' deputy tourism minister yesterday said the country 'absolutely deserves' to be in the loosest category. 

After today, the green list - which currently contains 12 countries - will not be reviewed until the week running up to June 28. 

That means it will be July before there is another chance for more destinations to make it on to the list. 

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