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NEWS


Heathrow: a new Border Force back-office system has been blamed for delays this week


UK border delays expected in wake of increase in travellers


Ian Taylor


Lengthy border queues may be the price of increased numbers travelling, industry insiders have warned, after the government slashed the countries on its red list from Monday and the Foreign Office pledged to bring its travel advice into line. Industry leaders


welcomed the reduction in restrictions following the scrapping of pre-departure tests from October 4, with Abta chief executive Mark Tanzer suggesting: “The government acted on the industry’s calls.” But Travel Weekly understands


Border Force is struggling to cope with arrivals due to bugs in a new back-office system and the sheer number of changes at the border. E-gates at Heathrow have failed


travelweekly.co.uk STORY TOP


several times in recent days and failed again on Tuesday morning, according to an aviation source, who said: “A new Border Force back-office system has bugs. They rolled it out too quickly under pressure from the industry and the Department for Transport.” The source warned: “This is likely to continue for the foreseeable future. They keep finding new bugs.” A second source told


Travel Weekly: “They moved a shed load of countries off the red list and massively increased


the countries on the recognised vaccination list. The speed at which changes have to take place following each announcement puts enormous pressure on the system and there is hardly any time to do proper testing. “The fewer changes to the


technology the better, but you’re not going to say ‘Don’t update it’.


“Unfortunately, it will be some


time before the border experience is consistent across the day or as it was in 2019.” The source noted: “The


government has said ‘Travel will be different’. As we get more simplicity into the system, we hope it will stabilise. But there is a lot of pressure on Border Force. It needs investment and not just in people.” The government cut the red list


from 54 countries to seven, leaving just Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Haiti, Panama, Peru and Venezuela on the list, and recognised the vaccinations and certificates of 37 additional countries including India and Turkey. A day earlier, the Foreign Office


relaxed its travel advice for more than 30 countries, saying it would “no longer advise against travel to non-red list countries on Covid-19 grounds


except in exceptional circumstances”. Scotland and Wales also adopted


the changes, although Welsh health minister Eluned Morgan described them as “not without risk”, warning: “We’re concerned about the cumulative impact of the risk in opening up travel.” That was not enough for World


Travel & Tourism Council chief Julia Simpson, who criticised retention of the red list, saying: “There is no justification for a red list to remain.” However, an industry source


said: “The fact there are only seven countries on the list suggests there is some rational thinking behind it. “It’s not clearly defined, but there


are several principles. One is the level of variants of concern – the government is still concerned about the Beta variant. Another is the prevalence [of Covid]. And a third is the level of trust in the data.”


14 OCTOBER 2021 5


PICTURE: Shutterstock/Brookgardener


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