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Coronavirus: Italy in full lockdown, Israel 14-days quarantine, Vietnam blocks UK passport holders

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There were three core travel-related coronavirus updates on Monday evening.

All of Italy has been placed under lockdown

The ‘lockdown’ in place in Northern Italy will be extended to the entire country on Tuesday morning.

It is not yet clear what the impact on travel will be.  It is very likely that the majority of flights from the UK to Italy will have to be suspended, as happened on Sunday evening to Milan and Venice.

All visitors to Israel must undergo 14 days enforced quarantine

As was rumoured, the Israeli Government will make everyone wishing to enter the country – from any destination – undergo 14 days quarantine.

If you cannot prove on arrival that you have arranged to spend 14 days in quarantine in a private house, you will not be allowed entry.

It is not clear at this point if all flights will be suspended although it seems likely.  It is possible, for example, that the aircraft could fly down with the return crew onboard.  Regulations forbid the same crew from returning immediately due to the length of the flight.

As of 10pm on Monday, Virgin Atlantic is still showing Tel Aviv flights as departing but is not selling any tickets.  British Airways was still selling tickets.

Here is the Foreign Office guidance:

On 9 March 2020 Prime Minister Netanyahu announced that all arrivals entering Israel from overseas would be subject to home quarantine measures for 14 days on public health grounds, this decision will be reviewed in 14 days. We understand that visitors who are unable to demonstrate they can undertake the home quarantine measures will be refused entry in to Israel. We recommend checking Israel’s Ministry of Health website for updated information.

Vietnam bans UK passport holders from entering the country without a visa

Vietnam has suspended visa-free travel for UK passport holders.

The ban also applies to citizens of Germany, France, Spain, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Sweden.

Passport holders from all of the eight countries will no longer qualify for the ‘visa waiver’ programme which allows a stay of up to 15 days.  Bans on travellers from South Korea and Italy are already in place.

Anyone with flight tickets to Vietnam will now need to apply for a visa (e-visa is not acceptable) via the Embassy in Kensington.  It is not clear under what circumstances a visa would be granted to a UK passport holder as it is impossible to guarantee you will be free of coronavirus on the day you fly.

British Airways does not fly to Vietnam, with Vietnam Airlines offering the only direct flights.

Here is the official Foreign Office wording – this was issued on Sunday before the imposition of the ban on Monday:

The Vietnamese authorities are implementing extensive steps to mitigate the risks of infection, including health screening at airports and land borders. People showing signs of respiratory illness on arrival in Vietnam, those who have travelled from an area with confirmed cases or those that have come in to contact with people who have tested positive for coronavirus can expect to be checked and potentially quarantined.

Anyone confirmed as having coronavirus, including foreigners, can expect to be quarantined for a minimum of 14 days. You should comply with any additional screening measures put in place by the local authorities.

The Vietnamese authorities have also announced travel restrictions and quarantine requirements:

On 8 March, the Vietnamese Government announced plans to suspend the visa waiver programme for UK and other European nationals. This change could be implemented at very short notice. British citizens planning to enter Vietnam on the visa waiver programme should check before travelling.

Anyone who has visited China, Iran, Italy or Daegu city and Gyeongsangbuk province in South Korea in the previous 14 days will be refused entry to Vietnam. The only exceptions will be people with specific agreement travelling on official government business.

Flights from South Korea are being diverted to alternative airports, some a considerable distance away from the scheduled place of entry in to Vietnam.

The Vietnamese government has recommended that citizens wear masks in public, and it has introduced special permits for anyone seeking to organise large public events.

Comments (91)

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  • Daniel Evans says:

    So if I’m visiting Israel for 10 days I’ll spend the entire time in quarantine and then not be able to get my flight home. Does this mean my travel insurance will cover a cancellation or are FCO still saying it’s ok to travel?

    • John says:

      Unless you arrive before the reported 72 hour grace period is up, if you’re a non-citizen you’d need to prove ability to “home quarantine”, unlikely without resident friends/family to put you up – from what I’ve read a hotel is no good even if you wanted to try it – being denied entry is the logical outcome.

      I’m sure the FCO isn’t going to say “don’t travel” on that basis, which leaves it to BA to decide if it cancels flights, based on behaviour on other routes thats anyone’s guess.

      We’ve got a flight there in just over 14 days, which is into the ‘review’ period, making it even less clear! I’m hoping BA will cancel.

    • Paul says:

      Can’t see you being allowed to board. On entry you need to demonstrate that you have accommodation for 14 days. Insurance should kick in as while the FCO drags its feet the Israeli restriction has same effect.

      • Rob says:

        Note that hotel accommodation is not acceptable. It must be a private home.

  • Susie says:

    I am supposed to be going to Vietnam on Monday and am confused as I have been trying to keep up to date on the situation in Vietnam and knew the visa waiver programme had been suspended yesterday. I applied for a visa approval letter yesterday and I received this overnight. I have not seen (or have I missed) official confirmation that only a visa issued from the London embassy is allowed.

  • Paul says:

    I have no issues with nations taking the actions they are. This is a serious matter and so stopping travel for tourism seems sensible and proportionate. What concerns me is the UK appears to be complacent and ignoring the lessons that appear obvious. Why for example are large gatherings still allowed, theatres are open and flights still operating from Italy.
    I understand that the science is leading this but sometimes the heart should lead the head and I would prefer an abundance of caution right now. Let’s start by stopping flights from Italy.

    • Callum says:

      “The heart should rule the head” is a demonstrably stupid way to run a country. I’m getting somewhat sick and tired of the huge number of people whose attitude to science can be summed up by “yes, those experts have collectively spent a million years studying this – but I feel I know better than them because I read some Daily Mail articles”. It’s no exaggeration to say that could be responsible for the downfall of modern society!

      People do not comply with heavy handed restrictions for long (look at the attempted mass exodus in Italy when the quarantine plan was leaked). Implement before they are necessary and compliance will hit rock bottom right at the point you need it most.

      • Zoe says:

        Good job there isn’t a super power being run by someone who doesn’t trust experts just watches Fox News…

        • Lady London says:

          Superpowers now include Google and a few others that span geographies.

      • Jcp says:

        This is how we end up with underclass idiots emptying bog roll shelves.

        • Shoestring says:

          otoh for the higher risk group, I can’t see that you would criticise somebody for stockpiling a few necessities (food/ water/ toilet rolls/ otc medicines) so that they can, if they decide it’s appropriate, hole up at home for a couple of weeks with some good books or box sets to watch on TV – ie if they are to remove themselves from the causes of disease transmission, they need to be able to survive comfortably

      • Doug M says:

        A person is reasonable, people are stupid.

  • Fariel says:

    All, regarding Vietnam it caught is whilst travelling there from Singapore. We live in London and my partners Italian passport is what denied him entry. Vietnam does not at all allow people to access from said countries, visa free exception is not accurate. Complete entry prohibition for a lot of EU and UK citizens is what is happening. Oh well, Thailand will profit now.

  • Asaf says:

    Re Israel – the ban is actually in force since Monday 6 pm UK time. If you are a tourist already there – you have till Thursday to leave. (if you can prove compliance to some rules).

  • Dawn says:

    I work with Vet students and send them all over the world to do projects in India and Sri Lanka in particular. India won’t allow anyone to apply for a visa if they have been to countries like Italy, China, Vietnam, Japan, Laos…etc…. our Vet has a trip booked to Japan in May and therefore can’t go to India in August to teach the students. The Universities are now telling students they can’t go abroad at all, even if the country concerned does not have any/many cases. Phew…… it’s a tough one on everyone.

    • Andrew says:

      Indeed.

      I understand that strict enforcement of rules at one particular university has stopped travel “overseas” to Northern Ireland from Scotland.

      But then, when I used to buy a copy of “The Scotsman” whilst working in London, it was kept with “Overseas News” in WH Smith.

  • Dominic says:

    Booked flights to Israel 10 days ago as it seemed like a semi safe bet for a few days break.

    That went badly.

  • JohnT says:

    The stats used should also state how many active cases? Anyone who had it and has recovered is surely no longer a risk, eg after 15 days?

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