UK to ease COVID-19 restrictions over travel to England: Johnson

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced changes Wednesday to Covid rules for travel to England. (File/AFP)
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Updated 06 January 2022
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UK to ease COVID-19 restrictions over travel to England: Johnson

  • The prime minister has resisted imposing stringent lockdown measures in England
  • The increasing number of cases has put huge strains on public services such as hospitals

LONDON: UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced changes Wednesday to COVID-19 rules for travel to England, scrapping the need for pre-departure tests and quarantine on arrival until the traveler has tested negative.
“I can announce that in England from 4:00 a.m. (0400 GMT) on Friday we will be scrapping the pre-departure test, which discourages many from traveling for fear of being trapped overseas and incurring significant extra expense,” Johnson told lawmakers in parliament.

Britain on Wednesday reported record COVID-19 prevalence for the last week of 2021, with one in 15 people in England infected, as Johnson said cases were increasing at the fastest rate ever.
The increasing number of cases has put huge strains on public services such as hospitals, which face staff shortages and growing admissions.

The prime minister has resisted imposing stringent lockdown measures in England. Instead, he has bet that a vaccine booster drive and caution among the population will be enough to constrain the latest wave of infections, despite the arrival of the highly transmissible omicron variant.


Bangladesh criticizes India over fugitive leader Hasina’s speech

Updated 58 min 31 sec ago
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Bangladesh criticizes India over fugitive leader Hasina’s speech

  • Hasina said in her audio address that “Bangladesh will never experience free and fair elections” under interim leader Muhammad Yunus

DHAKA: Bangladesh said on Sunday it was “surprised” and “shocked” that India had allowed fugitive former prime minister Sheikh Hasina to make a public address in New Delhi.
Hasina, 78, fled to neighboring India in August 2024 after a student-led uprising ended her iron-fisted 15-year rule. She made her first public speech since then in an audio address to a packed press club in Delhi on Friday.
She was found guilty in absentia by a Dhaka court in November of incitement, issuing an order to kill and inaction to prevent atrocities and was sentenced to be hanged.
“The government and the people of Bangladesh are surprised and shocked,” Dhaka’s foreign ministry said in a statement.
“Allowing the event to take place in the Indian capital and letting mass murderer Hasina openly deliver her hate speech... constitute a clear affront to the people and the Government of Bangladesh.”
It said allowing Hasina to make the speech set “a dangerous precedent” that could “seriously impair bilateral relations.”
Bangladesh voters go to the polls on February 12 to choose new leaders after a period of turmoil that followed the overthrow of Hasina’s autocratic government.
Hasina said in her audio address that “Bangladesh will never experience free and fair elections” under interim leader Muhammad Yunus.
More than 100,000 people watched the address, which was broadcast online.
Bangladesh has asked India to extradite Hasina, but New Delhi has yet to comment on the request.
India’s past support for Hasina has frayed relations between the South Asian neighbors since her overthrow.