France has today eased strict COVID travel restrictions for arrivals from the United Kingdom.
It means vaccinated travellers will no longer be required to self-isolate upon arrival.
Prime Minister Jean Castex's office said the easing was down to the "predominance of the Omicron variant in both France and the United Kingdom".
France reimposed travel restrictions with the UK in the lead-up to Christmas as the new variant, first detected in South Africa in November, was spreading fast across Europe with Britain initially the most impacted.
The easing has been welcomed by the head of the World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC), who stressed in a statement that "once a variant is endemic closing borders is pointless and only damages livelihoods especially in travel and tourism one of the hardest-hit sectors during the pandemic."
“France is one of the biggest markets for UK tourists who, according to WTTC’s 2021 Economic Impact Report, account for 14% of overseas visitors. Total international visitor spend in France was worth more than €60 billion pre-pandemic," Julia Simpson added.
From Friday, all travellers, regardless of the vaccination status, will have to present a negative test (PCR or antigenic) no older than 24 hours to enter France.
Vaccinated people will however no longer be required to justify a compelling reason to visit the country and will no longer have to submit to a period of self-isolation.
Unvaccinated people, however, will need to present a compelling reason, fill out a passenger locator form prior to departure and observe "a strict" 10-day quarantine at their chosen location that "will be monitored by police".
The number of infections detected in France has been breaking record after record.
It first crossed the
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