Expatriates wait for clarity over foreign jabs

Turbulent times: Ryanair sign in the departures area of Liverpool John Lennon AIrport (Simon Calder)
Turbulent times: Ryanair sign in the departures area of Liverpool John Lennon AIrport (Simon Calder)

British expatriates hope to learn by Friday that vaccinations received abroad will enable them to avoid quarantine on arrival from “amber list” locations.

From Spain, Sarah Price tweeted: “As a Brit living in Spain I am desperate to see family without the constraints of quarantine.”

On 8 July, the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, announced that people who had completed a course of NHS vaccinations would not need to self-isolate on return from middle-risk countries from 19 July – covering a large majority of key nations, including the US, Germany, Spain and Italy.

But unlike many other nations, the UK currently refuses to accept proof of vaccination abroad as an alternative to self-isolation. That decision affects both expatriates who were jabbed abroad as well as foreign citizens hoping to visit family in the UK.

The vaccines minister, Nadhim Zahawi, told the last sitting of Commons on Thursday: “By the end of this month, UK nationals who have been vaccinated overseas will be able to talk to their GP, go through what vaccine they have had, and have it registered with the NHS that they have been vaccinated.

“The reason for the conversation with the GP is to make sure that whatever vaccine they have had is approved in the United Kingdom.”

His remarks triggered consternation among many British expatriates, because people living abroad are not supposed to have GPs in the UK. Officials are thought to be working on other means of verification, possibly including the EU digital Covid pass.

One British man living abroad said: “Plenty of us haven’t officially left and still have doctors. We often see them when we return home. But I really don’t know how I’m supposed to get through on the phone from here and discuss my German-administered AZ with them.”

Claire Lewis tweeted: “This is driving us Brits living in EU with the vaccination certificate crazy. We watch doubly vaccinated Brit tourists coming to and fro all over Europe with relative ease.

“We just want to get to UK to see relatives for first time in two years with reciprocal treatment.”

Kristen Covo wrote: “Ridiculous that we won’t allow entry to anyone who has been vaccinated with a WHO-approved vaccine. Or that citizens cannot return home because they were not vaccinated by the NHS. It is just more ludicrous excuses that need to end.”

Ministers from France and Italy have written to the foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, pleading for their fully vaccinated citizens to be allowed to avoid quarantine.

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “We recognise there are a large variety of Covid-19 vaccines being administered worldwide and work is ongoing to determine which non-UK vaccines and certification solutions we might be confident to recognise.”

Meanwhile the UK’s inbound travel industry, which in 2019 attracted 41 million people spending £28bn, has effectively written off the summer, with no indication when vaccinated foreign visitors might be allowed to skip quarantine and take a British holiday.