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.


Germany to order strike drones worth 536 million euros

Updated 6 sec ago
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Germany to order strike drones worth 536 million euros

BERLIN: The German government plans to order strike drones worth 536 ​million euros ($638 million) from German startups Helsing and Stark Defense, part of a rearmament push after Russia’s attack on Ukraine.
The contracts for ‌loitering munitions — ‌drones that ‌hover over ⁠a ​potential ‌strike area before flying into targets — are part of a larger framework deal worth 4.3 billion euros.
The contracts, outlined in documents ⁠seen by Reuters, are widely ‌expected to be ‍rubber-stamped by ‍the lower house of parliament’s ‍budget committee. They were first reported by Spiegel magazine.
The drones are initially intended ​to support Germany’s 45th Tank Brigade, which is deployed ⁠in Lithuania.
According to the documents, the contracts with the two companies are to have a term of seven years. The initial batch is scheduled to be delivered by early 2027.
($1 = 0.8399 euros)