Covid in Scotland: Some quarantine-free foreign travel to be allowed
People in Scotland will be able to travel to some foreign destinations without the need to quarantine on their return, the BBC understands.
It will be part of a traffic lights system, similar to that in England, and will come into effect on 24 May.
Countries are to be classified as green, amber and red and a review will take place every four weeks.
The Scottish government said a Covid briefing would take place on Tuesday and it would not comment on reports.
If the system is like that of England then the categorisation of countries will be based on both Covid cases and vaccine rates.
The green list - operational down south from 17 May - includes Portugal, Israel, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Brunei, Iceland, Gibraltar, Falkland Islands, Faroe Islands, South Georgia and the Sandwich Islands, St Helena, Tristan de Cunha and Ascension Island. A passenger locator form is necessary plus pre-departure testing but no hotel quarantine or self-isolation is needed on return.
The England approach for the amber list also involves form filling, testing and no hotel stay, but self-isolation for 10 days would be required. Red countries would involve hotel quarantine.
The current Scottish government guidance is that you should only go abroad if you have "an essential reason to do so. You must not travel abroad on holiday".
People who do need to travel have to isolate in a hotel, at a cost of about £1,750, or at home for at least 10 days after arriving back.
May 11, 2021 at 04:15AM
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-57059379
Labels: BBC News
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