From 4am Monday January 18, inbound passengers arriving by boat, plane or train from
countries outside the Common Travel Area (UK, Republic of Ireland, the Isle of
Man and the Channel Islands) will have to take a test up to 72 hours before
departing the country they are in, to help protect against the new strains of
coronavirus such as those seen in Brazil, Denmark and South Africa.
The introduction of
the measures is in response to the changes seen in the transmission of the
virus both in in the UK and across the globe.
Mr Gething says pre-departure
testing will provide an additional layer of safety from imported cases of
coronavirus on top of the mandatory 10 day quarantine for arrivals, helping
identify people who may currently be infectious and preventing them from
travelling to Wales.
A negative
pre-departure test reduces the risk of someone travelling whilst infectious,
acting as another safeguard to prevent imported infections.
Passengers
arriving from countries not on the Welsh Government’s Travel Corridor list must
continue to self-isolate for 10 days, regardless of their pre-departure test
result, to provide further robust protection from those travelling from
high-risk countries.
Prior to
departure, passengers will need to present proof of a negative COVID-19 test
result to carriers, as well as their Passenger Locator Form.
The move further
bolsters existing protective measures which helped to safely enable
international travel last year, with self-isolation for new arrivals and Travel
Corridors remaining critical in reducing the risk of imported cases from
high-risk countries.
Vaughan Gething said: “We are doing everything we can to slow down the spread of the virus.
“These new measures
will help ensure we prevent new strains of the virus developing internationally
from being imported into Wales.
“We are already
asking passengers returning from high-risk countries to self-isolate for 10
days and these requirements remain in place.
“Added to the
requirement to self-isolate, pre-departure tests will provide a further line of
defence - helping us control the virus as we continue to roll-out the vaccine
at pace.”
Alert Level 4
lockdown restrictions, which came into force on 18 December 2020, remain in
place meaning everyone must stay at home unless travelling for a very limited
set of reasons, including for work.
Travelling for a
holiday is not permitted under alert level 4, whether that is in Wales,
elsewhere in the UK or overseas.
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