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U.K. border officers to stop routine COVID checks: report

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LONDON -

U.K. border officers have been directed to stop routinely checking whether travellers from many countries have tested negative for COVID-19, British media reported Wednesday, citing leaked government documents.

While the change is designed to reduce waiting times for airport immigration checks, it has raised concerns about importing new coronavirus cases at a time when infection rates in Britain are soaring, the Guardian newspaper reported.

The new policy applies to people arriving from so-called green and amber list countries, the top two levels of the government's three-tier traffic light system for foreign travel. Everyone entering Britain is still legally required to fill out a passenger locator form and have a negative COVID-19 test even if border officials don't routinely check their documentation. 

The changes come after the government relaxed quarantine rules for amber-list countries, including most of Europe, triggering warnings that holiday travellers might face hours-long lines for airport immigration checks.

Beginning this week, fully vaccinated people travelling from most amber-list countries are no longer required to self-isolate after they arrive in Britain. Travellers arriving from France still have to self-isolate, even though it is an amber destination, because of concern about virus variants circulating there. Anyone travelling from a red list country must quarantine at a government-approved hotel at their own expense.

The government declined to comment on the leak, but stressed that airlines are still required to check coronavirus documentation before passengers board aircraft, the Guardian reported.

Lucy Moreton, professional officer for the union that represents border, immigration and customs workers, said Border Force staff have also been told not to challenge COVID documentation.

"Certainly it will reduce queue times significantly and hopefully also the level of verbal abuse to which Border Force staff are subject," Moreton told the BBC. "That is welcome to us. The impact on the U.K.'s COVID security is ultimately a scientific determination."

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