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Closed petition Place the UAE on the UK Travel Corridor list
There are 250,000 UK citizens living in the UAE. Anyone arriving from the UAE to the UK must isolate for 14 days. Covid-19 PCR tests are readily accessible in the UAE and travellers are able to test prior to flying. The UAE should be added to the UK Travel Corridor.
More details
Let us come home without restriction!
We need to petition to those who decide which countries are allowed to be part of the Travel Corridor and have the power to place the UAE on this list! We have dealt with Covid-19 in this country with extreme caution, and should be exempt from quarantine due to our testing restrictions and low cases.
This petition is closed All petitions run for 6 months
Government responded
This response was given on 24 November 2020
The UAE was added to the government’s travel corridors list at 4am on Saturday 14 November.
Read the response in full
The Government keeps the countries and territories from which international arrivals are required to self-isolate under constant review. We have been clear that we will open up Travel Corridors to countries, territories and islands when there is a sustained Improvement under the UK’s methodology.
The Joint Biosecurity Centre (JBC) and Public Health England (PHE) monitor over 250 countries, territories and islands daily to inform these risk assessments. Factors taken into consideration include:
• An estimate of the proportion of the population that is currently infected (this is known as ‘point prevalence’);
• Weekly case incidence rate taking into account population size of the country, territory or island;
• Trends in incidence, deaths, hospitalisations and intensive care admissions;
• Information on laboratory capacity, testing and contact tracing strategies, and test positivity rates;
• COVID-19 cases detected in the UK following travel to the country, territory or island (‘imported infections’);
• Qualitative information related to the reliability of reported data and the maturity of public health systems; and
• Public health measures in place and the enforcement of, and adherence to, those measures.
The UAE was added to the government’s travel corridors list at 4am on Saturday 14 November following a decrease in risk from COVID-19 in the UAE.
On 7 October, the Secretary of State announced the establishment of the Global Travel Taskforce. The aim of the Taskforce will be to consider what steps the government can take, both domestically and internationally, to enable the safe and sustainable recovery of international travel. To do this, the taskforce will consider:
• how a testing regime for international arrivals could be implemented to boost safe travel to and from the UK
• what steps we can take to facilitate business and tourist travel on a bilateral and global basis, through innovative testing models and other non-testing means
• more broadly, what steps we can take to increase consumer confidence and reduce the barriers to a safe and sustainable recovery of international travel
Testing is not the only solution and so the taskforce will also consider steps to support the recovery of international travel more broadly, including non-testing based interventions.
Facilitating safe international travel is not a task that can be undertaken by the government alone, so this taskforce will operate in collaboration with the transport industry, the tourism and local business sectors and the private testing sector. It will also engage with partners from governments across the globe.
The taskforce will formally report back to the Prime Minister in November 2020
Department for Transport
This is a revised response. The Petitions Committee requested a response which more directly addressed the request of the petition. You can find the original response towards the bottom of the petition page (https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/553192)
Related activity
Original Government response
Decisions on International Travel Corridors are informed by risk assessments provided by the JBC, working closely with PHE, using a methodology endorsed by the four Chief Medical Officers of the UK.
The Government has emphasised that it is vitally important that we manage the risk and keep the number of cases of COVID-19 in the UK as low as possible.
The Government keeps the countries and territories from which international arrivals are required to self-isolate under constant review. We have been clear that we will open up Travel Corridors to countries, territories and islands when there is a sustained Improvement under the UK’s methodology.
The Joint Biosecurity Centre (JBC) and Public Health England (PHE) monitor over 250 countries, territories and islands daily to inform these risk assessments. Factors taken into consideration include:
• An estimate of the proportion of the population that is currently infected (this is known as ‘point prevalence’);
• Weekly case incidence rate taking into account population size of the country, territory or island;
• Trends in incidence, deaths, hospitalisations and intensive care admissions;
• Information on laboratory capacity, testing and contact tracing strategies, and test positivity rates;
• COVID-19 cases detected in the UK following travel to the country, territory or island (‘imported infections’);
• Qualitative information related to the reliability of reported data and the maturity of public health systems; and
• Public health measures in place and the enforcement of, and adherence to, those measures.
On 7 October, the Secretary of State announced the establishment of the Global Travel Taskforce. The aim of the Taskforce will be to consider what steps the government can take, both domestically and internationally, to enable the safe and sustainable recovery of international travel. To do this, the taskforce will consider:
• how a testing regime for international arrivals could be implemented to boost safe travel to and from the UK
• what steps we can take to facilitate business and tourist travel on a bilateral and global basis, through innovative testing models and other non-testing means
• more broadly, what steps we can take to increase consumer confidence and reduce the barriers to a safe and sustainable recovery of international travel
Testing is not the only solution and so the taskforce will also consider steps to support the recovery of international travel more broadly, including non-testing based interventions.
Facilitating safe international travel is not a task that can be undertaken by the government alone, so this taskforce will operate in collaboration with the transport industry, the tourism and local business sectors and the private testing sector. It will also engage with partners from governments across the globe.
The taskforce will formally report back to the Prime Minister in November 2020
Department for Transport
This response was given on 4 November 2020. The Petitions Committee then requested a revised response, that more directly addressed the request of the petition.