Boris Johnson warns tougher border rules with France may be needed

Boris Johnson warns new border restrictions with France could come in ‘very soon’ despite fears it could lead to delays to food and medical supplies

  • Spread of coronavirus variants in France prompted concern over border rules
  • Boris Johnson today confirmed the Government is considering tougher rules
  • PM said he will ‘take a decision, no matter how tough’ and may be ‘very soon’  

Boris Johnson has confirmed he is considering imposing tougher restrictions on travel from France to prevent the importation of coronavirus variants despite the risks to cross-Channel trade.

The Prime Minister said a balance had to be struck between the need to protect public health and the major disruption that would be caused to the flow of goods including food and medicine.

Mr Johnson said the Government will ‘take a decision, no matter how tough’ and that measures may be needed ‘very soon’.  

His comments to MPs came amid concerns about the spread of the South African and Brazilian variants of coronavirus. 

Boris Johnson has confirmed he is considering imposing tougher restrictions on travel from France to prevent the importation of coronavirus variants

Mr Johnson was grilled on the subject during an appearance in front of the Liaison Committee this afternoon.  

Home Affairs Committee chairwoman Yvette Cooper said France had 2-3,000 cases of the variants and questioned why it was not on the ‘red list’ of countries from which travel is effectively banned.

She acknowledged that the need for trade would mean quarantine was not appropriate for hauliers but questioned why they were not being tested for coronavirus.

Mr Johnson said putting France on the ‘red list’ was ‘something that we will have to look at’ due to concerns about the effectiveness of the vaccines against new variants. 

The PM said ‘we have to look at the situation at the Channel’ and ‘we can’t rule out tougher measures and we will put them in if necessary’.

When France required the testing of hauliers crossing the channel in December it led to thousands of lorries being stranded in Kent while the arrangements were put in place.

Mr Johnson said: ‘There is a balance to be struck and what we don’t know is the exact state of the efficacy of the vaccines against the new variants and we have to balance that against the very serious disruption that is entailed by curtailing cross-channel trade.

When France required the testing of hauliers crossing the channel in December it led to thousands of lorries being stranded in Kent while the arrangements were put in place

‘This country depends very largely for the food in our shops, for the medicines that we need on that trade flowing smoothly.

‘We will take a decision, no matter how tough, to interrupt that trade, to interrupt those flows, if we think that it is necessary to protect public health and to stop new variants coming in.

‘It may be that we have to do that very soon.’

His comments followed reports that Mr Johnson is under pressure from England’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty and his deputy Jonathan Van-Tam to implement tougher border controls. 

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