There is a certain logic in the government’s
position, in an attempt to justify its prevarication, that quarantining people makes more sense when people travel from an
area with a high incidence of infection to an area with a low incidence than
the other way round. It means, of course, that it would make more sense to quarantine
British people travelling to almost any other country in the world than people
travelling to Britain. I can just imagine the tabloid outrage at ‘Brits’ being
so 'unfairly' treated.
The UK’s proposals for ‘quarantining’
people on arrival look like too little too late – and even now it will be
another two weeks before they come into effect. It is one of life’s curious anomalies
that the one country which absolutely had to leave the EU in order to control
its borders was the outstanding example of not bothering to do so, whilst all
those countries which, according to the Brexiteers, had no control of their
borders because they’re part of the EU acted swiftly to close their own. It
also looks like more of a belated political reaction to the clamour for closing
the borders than a response driven by concern about the spread of the virus.
But it isn’t even a proper system of
quarantine. If I understand the proposal
correctly (and it’s always possible that the government will issue further ‘clarification’
as they invariably do with their half-baked proposals), people (well, some of them
– the list of exceptions is growing) arriving in the UK will be obliged to give
border officials an address where they will solemnly promise to stay for 14
days in self-isolation. After giving the address to the officials concerned, new
arrivals – who may or may not have an adequate command of English or Welsh to
understand the instructions they’ve been given – will then be free to leave the
airport, railway station or port and travel by car, train, bus or taxi to the duly
notified destination, mixing freely with the population at large en route. They
will then be trusted to stay in isolation at that destination for two weeks.
This will be ‘enforced’ by random spot checks which may or may not be
undertaken by understaffed services which are already struggling with their current
workload. No, they don't seem to have spotted the potential flaws yet for some reason.
1 comment:
gesture politics is a funny old game, but rapidly becoming the only game in town for Boris and his team. When you metaphorically have 2 left feet, little or no sense of balance, no grip, and an almost empty head I guess most other games are too much like hard work !
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