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Travellers frustrated over ‘knee-jerk’ Spain quarantine requirement

Travellers returning from Spain have expressed their frustration and resignation at the short-notice quarantine requirements.

In a decision announced on Saturday – less than five hours before it came into force – Spain was removed from the UK’s list of safe destinations after it saw a spike in the number of coronavirus cases.

Joe Allen, a TV producer from London who visited Madrid and returned on Sunday, said he felt let down by the lack of information to travellers about the “knee-jerk” decision.

Mr Allen told the PA news agency: “We waited for the appropriate time and I specifically waited for the quarantine to have been lifted from Spain, and I absolutely wouldn’t have gone with a quarantine.

“We all sort of resigned ourselves in fact pretty quickly that there was nothing we could do about it, we just have to follow the rules and we get that, but I think we’re all frustrated.”

The 32-year-old said he had not had any official communication from the Government about the quarantine but understood its importance.

Coronavirus – Sun Jul 26, 2020
Passengers arriving at Gatwick Airport from Spain after the announcement (Dominic Lipinski/PA)

He added: “I was expecting perhaps at border control there’d be some big old posters or digital screens – or people with megaphones perhaps saying ‘Don’t forget you need to isolate’.

“What would have been useful is for someone who made it clear in advance – ‘There is a real possibility that you could get stopped from coming home’.

“You can argue that I was naive for not knowing that, but I think it might have been helpful.”

Laura Wood, 41, from Oxfordshire, flew from Gatwick to Spain’s Costa Blanca with her family for a two-week holiday, also returning on Sunday, shortly after the measures took effect.

She told PA: “It was a bit of a last-minute disappointment to the end of the holiday but we’re going to get on with it. There has to be a cut-off, I guess, and we were just on the unlucky side of it.”

“It was a different type of holiday than we’ve had, you don’t kind of expect to be walking along the seafront wearing a mask in 30-degree heat,” she added.

Mrs Wood said she had experienced some “smug” responses from people at home and online after the measures were announced.

“I think it works both ways; I don’t think people can complain about the quarantine necessarily because we knew we were taking risks, but I think people’s joy at other people’s misfortune is a bit sad.”

Coronavirus – Mon Jul 27, 2020
Au pair Laura Martin returned from Madrid on Monday (Emma Bowden/PA)

Sophia Fadil, from Brighton, 32, works in retail after being made redundant during lockdown from her job in the travel industry.

She is currently on holiday in the Alicante region with her partner and son.

She told PA the measures are a “slap in the face” for the travel industry and said she would likely not have travelled.

“I think this was outrageous that the Government finally confirmed it three hours before it was implemented so that didn’t give anyone enough time to travel home if they needed to,” she said.

Laura Martin, a 27-year-old au pair who lives in London, is unable to return to work for 14 days after she returned from Madrid.

“The quarantine is not a problem. I think it’s just for people’s safety,” she told PA.

Coronavirus – Mon Jul 27, 2020
Celia Gonzalez returned to London from Madrid (Steve Parsons/PA)

Celia Gonzalez, 30, returned to London from Madrid after visiting family in Spain.

She told PA: “People are upset because they were on holiday, but you take the risk when you travel in the middle of a pandemic anyway.”