Boris Johnson warns there are ‘signs of a second wave’ of coronavirus in Europe and defends the decision to reimpose quarantine rules on Spain amid worsening diplomatic row with Spanish PM who blasts UK’s ‘error’

  • UK reimposed quarantine travel rules on Spain on Saturday after spike in cases
  • Decision has sparked fury in Madrid with Spanish PM labelling decision ‘unjust’ 
  • Boris Johnson today defended decision to remove Spain from UK’s safe travel list
  • PM said there are now ‘signs of second wave’ of coronavirus in European nations 

Boris Johnson today warned there are ‘signs of a second wave’ of coronavirus in Europe as he defended the UK’s decision to reimpose quarantine rules on Spanish travel. 

Britain’s decision to drop Spain from its safe travel list has sparked a diplomatic war between Madrid and London. 

The Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said the UK’s blanket ban on all non-essential travel to Spain is an ‘error’ and is ‘unjust’. 

But Mr Johnson insisted this morning the UK Government must act quickly to respond to what it believes are threats to the domestic fight against coronavirus. 

He said: ‘What we have to do is take swift and decisive action where we think that the risks are starting to bubble up again.

‘Let’s be absolutely clear about what’s happening in Europe, amongst some of our European friends, I’m afraid you are starting to see in some places the signs of a second wave of the pandemic.’

Meanwhile, Mr Johnson insisted it is up to individuals to decide whether to travel abroad this summer amid mounting uncertainty.  

He said: ‘These are decisions for families, for individuals, about where they want to go.’ 

He added: ‘It’s vital that when people are coming back from abroad, if they are coming back from a place where I’m afraid there is another outbreak, they must go into quarantine.

‘That’s why we have taken the action that we have and we will continue, throughout the summer, to take such action where it is necessary.’

The most up to date figures show the number of new cases is rocketing upwards in Spain. It announced 6,361 new cases over the weekend, up from 4,581 the previous weekend. France announced 2,551 new coronavirus cases on Monday 

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has claimed that tourists are safer in his country than the UK. These are the worst coronavirus hotspots in each country and the number of coronavirus cases per 100,000 people

Ministers insist 14 day quarantine rules remain in place despite claims self-isolation period could be cut to 10 days

Ministers today insisted the requirement for travellers returning to the UK from non-safe coronavirus countries to quarantine for 14 days remains in place despite claims the self-isolation period could soon be slashed. 

Reports overnight suggested the Government is considering reducing quarantine from 14 to 10 days in order to make family holidays abroad slightly more feasible. 

The proposals would see returning travellers tested eight days after they land and if the check comes back negative they would be given the green light to leave their homes two days later. 

It is thought that shaving four days off the fortnight quarantine period could be enough to persuade some holidaymakers to go ahead with their trips despite mounting uncertainty over foreign travel. 

The Government fears its sudden decision to reimpose quarantine rules on Britons returning from Spain will prompt mass cancellations and kill the summer holiday season.     

But local government minister Simon Clarke said this morning that ‘the situation remains that the Government’s advice is that you must quarantine for 14 days’.  

He told Sky News: ‘I wouldn’t want to blur that message. That is the current position. Obviously, with all of this guidance, we continue to take advice on the science and on the best practice that is sensible.

‘But we wouldn’t want to get any mixed messages today at all to the public: It is a 14 day quarantine.’  

The Government announced on Saturday that it was tightening rules on travel to Spain because of rising case numbers.  

But ministers faced accusations of presiding over chaos after initially banning travel to the Spanish mainland but travel was still allowed to the Canary and Balearic islands. 

However, everyone returning to Britain from anywhere in Spain was still told they have to quarantine for 14 days. 

The Foreign Office then moved last night to toughen the travel advice relating to the Spanish islands to bring them into line with the rules applying to the mainland. 

Britons make up over a fifth of foreign visitors to Spain, which relies heavily on tourism, and Madrid has said the UK government gave it no warning that the quarantine move was coming last weekend.  

Mr Sanchez told Spanish TV station Telecinco on Monday night: ‘I think the UK’s decision is an incorrect one.

‘Spain is made up of a number of regions that have a cumulative rate of contagion that is lower than the European average as well as the UK average.

‘The Spanish tourist industry has acted very responsibly over the past few months and has transferred a message of security with regards to the health emergency we are experiencing.

‘It’s true that on a global level the coronavirus pandemic continues to show a very worrying development and at European level as well, but in Spain the spread of the virus is not occurring in a uniform way.’

Mr Sanchez said the Spanish government is pushing for the UK to reverse its decision as he claimed that ‘in epidemiological terms, it would be safer to be’ in certain parts of Spain on holiday than in the UK.  

‘We are going to carry on talking because we are friends and we have many commercial and economic links as well as geopolitical links,’ he said.   

Diplomatic ties were further strained this morning after local government minister Simon Clarke said the UK disagrees with Mr Sanchez’s assessment that travel to Spain should be allowed to continue. 

Mr Clarke told the BBC: ‘We respectfully disagree with the Spanish government’s position on this.

‘We obviously continue to work closely with them and we wish them every success in managing this outbreak, but we’ve seen a very sharp increase in cases in Spain.

‘A 75 per cent increase in cases reported between the middle of last week and the end of last week. That’s why we took the action that we have.

‘Clearly, you do have to make decisions on a country-wide basis. There is going to be internal transfer within Spain and it’s important that we do our utmost to protect the public.’    

Ministers decided on Saturday to reimpose quarantine restrictions on Spain after it emerged 10 Britons had returned from the country with coronavirus and Professor Chris Whitty said ‘doing nothing isn’t an option’. 

Boris Johnson, pictured during a visit to Beeston near Nottingham today, has warned there are ‘signs of second wave’ of coronavirus in Europe

The Government’s Covid-O committee met at the weekend after Health Secretary Matt Hancock raised concerns about a spike in Spanish infections on Friday. 

The group of six senior ministers, which includes Michael Gove, Grant Shapps and Priti Patel, were apparently told by Prof Whitty, the chief medical officer, that the situation in Spain had deteriorated in the last 48 hours. 

Ministers were told there had been an increase in infection in 15 of Spain’s 19 regions but the ‘clincher’ was the fact that 10 Britons had recently tested positive after coming back from the country. 

Prof Whitty described the number as ‘statistically significant’ as ministers took the controversial decision to reimpose quarantine on Spanish travellers at less than five hours notice. 

The account of the meeting came as Mr Shapps, the Transport Secretary, said he will return early from his holiday in Spain tomorrow amid growing fears that holidays in France and Germany could also be axed because of rising infection rates.

There is also mounting speculation that travel to Belgium could soon be impacted after the country put the brakes on its coronavirus lockdown exit strategy.  

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