Terrified Brits cancel holidays to France, Greece and Italy due to fears of similar quarantine restrictions in Spain

HOLIDAYMAKERS are cancelling holidays to France, Italy and Greece due to fears of last-minute quarantine restrictions being introduced similar to Spain.

On Saturday, the government issued a travel ban on Spain, with all Brits forced to quarantine for two weeks when returning to the UK.

The announcement, which gave just four hours notice, has affected as many as 600,000 Brits with Spanish holidays this summer, as many frantically tried to get home this weekend.

Now, concerned Brits are cancelling other trips planned abroad in case they are also forced to self-isolate at the last minute.

France and Germany have confirmed a spike in coronavirus cases, which could lead to further lockdowns, while Italy and Greece have also seen infections rise since tourists returned.

Paul Charles, founder of the travel PR consultancy firm PC Agency, told The Times: "People are cancelling not just Spain but other short-haul bookings.

"We’ve heard of lots of cancellations for holidays to France, Italy and Greece."

France saw 1,130 new cases of coronavirus on Saturday, while Italy daily cases jumped from 128 to 306 last week. Greece has seen coronavirus cases also rise since international tourists returned from July 1.

Mr Charles continued: "Dominic Raab said they wouldn’t hesitate to introduce quarantine measures on other countries and that’s simply put fear into people."

The Foreign Secretary told Sky's Sophy Ridge yesterday: "As we've found with Spain, we can't give a guarantee."

Mr Raab added: "There is an element of uncertainty this summer if people go abroad.

"I'm not going to tell people what they should or shouldn't do. They should follow the advice."

Dominic Raab said they wouldn’t hesitate to introduce quarantine measures on other countries and that’s simply put fear into people

Last week, it was reported that two thirds of hotel bookings in Spain were cancelled as tourists were put off by the country’s coronavirus spike, ahead of the travel ban announcement.

Hotel cancellation rates were as high as 70 per cent in the Balearic Islands, which includes Majorca and Ibiza, according to tourism market research group Dingus.

For some hotels the number of tourists cancelling stays booked weeks or months ago outweighs the number of new bookings.

A spokesperson for the Association of Hotel Chains of the Balearic Islands told Ultima Hora: “The situation has turned around in the last week and it has gone from having more reservations than cancellations to the opposite side.”

Brits are being warned not to cancel their own holidays to Spain as they may be left out of pocket, and to wait for tour operators to cancel them.

However, families who have booked flights and hotels separately may not get their money back as both remain operational.

Even Scotland has seen holiday cancellations after English tourists were warned they may be forced to quarantine.

Source: Read Full Article