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Brits banned from Spain until end of summer unless majority are vaccinated

A busy Beach in Barcelona on a hot summers day.
The beach in Barcelona during the summer – tourists are likely to be banned from the country until the autumn of 2021 due to coronavirus (Picture: Getty Images)

Brits are unlikely to be able to take their summer holidays in Spain after the country announced it is keeping its borders shut until enough people have had the vaccine.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez told a meeting of the World Tourism Organisation in Madrid that the country will ‘progressively’ prepare to welcome international tourists again once 70% of its citizens have had the jab, according to Euro Weekly News.

On the country’s current trajectory, this target won’t be met until the end of the summer, ruling out an August break on the Costa del Sol for millions of Brits.

‘Only mass vaccination will open the way to the normality we want,’ Mr Sanchez told the 113th meeting of the Executive Council held in Madrid on Wednesday.

It comes as the Covid situation in Spain worsened with 41,576 new coronavirus cases reported, the highest number registered in a 24-hour period since the virus first broke out.

All non-essential travel to Spain from the UK was banned last year, originally until January 9, before this was extended to February 2 at the earliest.

The country’s tourism sector has suffered hugely due to the pandemic with a reported loss of €106bn. Popular destinations including Barcelona, Costa del Sol and Costa Blanca have been left empty of tourists.

Spanish residents are still able to return from the UK but new travel rules mean they must present evidence of a negative test result for coronavirus on arrival. This is also now a requirement for anyone trying to enter the UK.

British tourists wait to check in for a flight to London at the airport in Palma de Mallorca on July 27, 2020. - Tour operator TUI has cancelled all British holidays to mainland Spain from today until August 9, after the UK government's decision to require travellers returning from the country to quarantine. (Photo by JAIME REINA / AFP) (Photo by JAIME REINA/AFP via Getty Images)
British tourists wait to check in for a flight to London at the airport in Palma de Mallorca on July 27, 2020 (Picture: Getty)
Sunbathers in designated roped-off areas enjoy a day out on Poniente Beach in Benidorm on June 21, 2020, a day after the town's beaches were reopened after three months of closure due to a national lockdown to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus. (Photo by JOSE JORDAN / STR / AFP) (Photo by JOSE JORDAN/STR/AFP via Getty Images)
Sunbathers on Poniente Beach in Benidorm on June 21, 2020, a day after the town’s beaches were reopened after three months of closure due to a national lockdown (Picture: Getty)

Ministers in Spain have been pushing for the introduction of a ‘vaccine certificate’ that might help to reopen the borders to those who are protected against the virus.

Anyone who receives the vaccine could be given a pass that would allow them to travel, according to Foreign Minister Arancha Gonzalez.

Millions of Brits usually travel to Spain every year over the summer. In 2016, a record 9.6million UK passport holders arrived in the Mediterranean country in July alone.

Beaches are full of people after lockdown, when the spanish governement ended the emergency state, in Barcelona, Spain, on Sunday, june 28, 2020.
Beaches in Barcelona last June after the national lockdown ended (Picture: Getty Images)

Last summer, holidays briefly opened up thanks to the UK’s travel corridor scheme which allowed people to leave the country without the need to quarantine on their return.

Spain was listed as one of the travel corridors until July 26 when its abrupt removal from the scheme caused thousands of holiday-makers to abandon their plans and rush home.

There have been more than 2,400,000 cases of coronavirus and 55,000 deaths in Spain since the pandemic began, according to John Hopkins University.

Some 20% of hospital beds and 35% of ICUs are currently full of Covid patients. This figure is far higher than those recorded across hospitals and ICUs in the first wave.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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source https://metro.co.uk/2021/01/22/brits-banned-from-spain-until-end-of-summer-unless-majority-are-vaccinated-13947576/

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