New travel restrictions for Spain effective 23.11

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  • Wherenext
    Wherenext Club Member Posts: 10,607 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2021 #32

    You and me both Rocky. 

    Let the effects of Covid and Brexit settle down.

    Next year who knows?🤷‍♂️ Hopefully.

  • Rocky 2 buckets
    Rocky 2 buckets Forum Participant Posts: 7,101
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    edited February 2021 #33

    +1👍🏻, I doubt they’ll close the borders in this country or ask for a stickyfoot of jab compliance😂

  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,142 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2021 #34

    Mind you, those who got the stickers would be OK 🤣

  • Rufs
    Rufs Club Member Posts: 4,072 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited February 2021 #35

    and i got 2, 1 for my hat and one for my coat coolgoing to laminate them along with my certificate once i have had second jab, who needs a vaccination  certificate laughingfoot-in-mouth

  • Tammygirl
    Tammygirl Club Member Posts: 7,957 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2021 #36

    Our ferry with BF has also been cancelled for the end of April, offered a refund or voucher, decided this time we will have the refund.

    If we do manage to get away in the autumn we will more than likely use the tunnel rather than the long crossing. 

    Hopefully by the autumn, tests will have been dropped in favour of the vaccination certificate whatever form that will take. The airlines are going to want something put in place by the summer so the autumn looks more favourable than June time. 

  • Unknown
    Unknown Forum Participant
    edited February 2021 #37
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  • Rufs
    Rufs Club Member Posts: 4,072 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited March 2021 #38

    "Brits may be allowed to visit Spain this summer even if there is no EU agreement on vaccine passports, according to reports.

    The country's tourism minister Fernando Valdés said Spain is considering a 'green corridor' for vaccinated Britons.

    He said the government is in talks with the UK in a bid to make travel between the two countries easier in time for the summer.

    Mr Valdés added that Spain is hoping to find an agreement with the EU so the country can start welcoming back tourists as soon as possible"

    It was inevitable, EU countries such as Spain bending over backwards so that Brits abroad can help to save their economy, and yet the EU is still prepared to decimate the likes of our Cornish fishing industry undecided

  • Unknown
    Unknown Forum Participant
    edited March 2021 #39
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  • marchie1053
    marchie1053 Forum Participant Posts: 584
    edited March 2021 #40

    Probably wouldnt be sat with a healthy dose of covid-19 vaccination in our bodies if we had not voted "leave", and looking at the prospect of being able to travel with a degree of safety.

    Even when UK was an EU Member, it had the right to use a delegated power to start its own vaccination programme. This was confirmed by Dr June Raine, Head of MHRA at the start of December 2020. The 'couldn't have gone solo if we had still been in EU' is a myth.

    Steve

  • Rufs
    Rufs Club Member Posts: 4,072 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited March 2021 #41

    I think the operative word in my post is "Probably"

    def...almost certainly; as far as one knows or can tell

  • moulesy
    moulesy Forum Participant Posts: 9,402 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited March 2021 #42

    But that "operative word" is simply wrong isn't it? There's no "almost certainly" or "as far as one knows" as is clear from  Steve's more knowledgeable post. Even Gavin Williamson was forced to admit that the "better off out" line was false in this case.

  • Rufs
    Rufs Club Member Posts: 4,072 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited March 2021 #43

    We will never know if being in would have made an appreciable differance to going it alone or not, remember, there was a lot of pressure from the opposition to "not go it alone",  which could have held a much greater sway if we had been in the EU, being out meant the government had a much easier task to bat aside any pressure from the EU/Opposition and certainly with respect to controlling covid-19, making travel a very real possibility later this year, and of course all the NHS benefits etc that go with it .

  • SeasideBill
    SeasideBill Forum Participant Posts: 2,112
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    edited March 2021 #44

    The European Commission were proposing a central procurement process for purchasing vaccines as an imperative back in October. If the UK was not leaving the EU it may have chosen to follow this strategy - who knows? As always with Brexit issues, you could call it either way.

  • marchie1053
    marchie1053 Forum Participant Posts: 584
    edited March 2021 #45

    Probably = in all likelihood

    Possibly = something that might happen

    So, to suggest that UK in all likelihood would not have been able to pursue its own vaccination programme is simply wrong, because UK had a pre-existing power that was not contingent upon any other event

    It is possible that a delay in implementing the vaccination programme may have caused you orme to become infcted with COVID, but that is only speculation

    Steve