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On Thursday, the Government announced that direct flights would be suspended from South Africa as well as Botswana, Lesotho, Eswatini, Zimbabwe and Namibia from midday yesterday until Sunday.
In that period, the mothballed hotel quarantine system is being reestablished, and – from 4am on Sunday – people who have been in those countries in the last 10 days will have to pay over £2,000 per adult to isolate in a government-sanctioned facility for 10 days.
However, ministers have ruled that travellers who arrive back in the UK from those countries before Sunday can self-isolate at home instead of a hotel.
One couple told The Telegraph that they were resigned to losing “half their savings” to quarantine costs after being caught out by the ban.
‘We are desperate to get home’
Jessica Dickson, 33, who is staying at a hotel in Johannesburg with her husband Michael, 38, and 16-month-old daughter Amelia Rose, said other British guests had managed to book last minute flights home with three connections to dodge hotel quarantine.
But the couple from Surrey, whose Friday flight home was cancelled in the wake of the ban, were struggling to get indirect flights with multiple changeovers with such a young child.
The pair, who have lived in the UK for the last 10 years, had flown out last week for their first trip to their native South Africa since the pandemic so their daughter could meet her family for the first time.
Mrs Dickson said: “We are desperate to get home as, from our perspective, we are like ‘fine, we are going to have to do hotel quarantine’. It is going to take half of our savings to do it, including the £5,000 flight, which is not a small chunk of change.
“But the sooner we can get there, the sooner we can do our time and the sooner we can get out.”
Elsewhere, two Welsh rugby teams, Cardiff and Scarlett clubs, were left stranded in South Africa after flying out for a tour. On Friday, the clubs assured worried families that they were “making every effort” to get the players back home.
Meanwhile, travel experts warned passengers could still get round the hotel quarantine rules by extending their holidays in non-red list countries beyond the 10-day period they need to declare they were in South Africa.
Paul Charles, the CEO of the travel consultancy The PC Agency and former Virgin Atlantic executive, said: “It may cause people to launder their status in other countries for two weeks before they come back to the UK,” said Mr Charles. “That is what people did earlier in the pandemic. I wouldn’t rush home for hotel quarantine. I would rather spend ten days in a European country that has not cut off South Africa.”
However, holidaymakers using such a loophole are facing shrinking options, as on Friday the EU Commission urged member states to place restrictions on arrivals after a case of the new variant was discovered in Belgium.
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