
Government to be more transparent in relation to how it determines which countries are on the green, amber and red lists under the traffic light system for international travel.
According to
report, Tui has announced it has joined Virgin Atlantic and British Airways’
parent company IAG in supporting legal action against the Government’s
coronavirus travel restrictions.
The UK’s largest
tour operator said the three firms have become interested parties in a
challenge launched by Ryanair and Manchester Airports Group last week.
There are
currently no major viable tourist destinations on the quarantine-free green
list.
Speaking at
the Travel Matters conference organised by industry association Abta, Tui
managing director Andrew Flintham said: “At the time of the last country
review, many destinations such as Malta, the Greek islands and the Balearics
had much lower rates (of infection) than the UK.
“It was
inexplicable as to why these were not added and instead Portugal was moved
straight from green to amber, without the slightest sign of stopping at the
much-vaunted green watchlist.
“We must
understand the criteria we are all working towards so we can pre-empt when
countries may move into different categories and help our customers with that
challenge, and we must understand how the framework is being applied.”
Abta chief
executive Mark Tanzer told the conference that the organisation is also looking
at whether legal action is “an avenue that we can pursue”.
He said: “The
hurdle for suing the Government is high but we think at least the Government
needs to say, did it measure the impact on the travel sector of its own policies,
and if it did, did it then decide that the sector nonetheless wasn’t worthy of
support?”
Mr Tanzer
issued a “heartfelt plea for political change” in relation to restrictions on
international travel.
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