PARIS — France is re-introducing tighter rules on arrivals from the UK who are not French residents to curb the spread of COVID, notably its Indian variant, the foreign ministry said on Thursday.
Britons and other non-EU arrivals will again have to prove that they have a “compelling reason” to enter France, it said.
The ministry did not define “compelling”, but the government has previously said that family, health or professional reasons could be acceptable.
France had relaxed that requirement in March for the United Kingdom, as well as a number of other non-members of the EU, which Britain left last year.
But again from Monday “compelling reasons will be required for non-EU foreigners who are not residents in France and who come to France from the United Kingdom”, the ministry said in a statement.
It said, in addition, those visitors would have to self-isolate for seven days on arrival.
The ministry added, however, that, for now, there would be “no systematic checks” to ensure compliance with the requirement, “given the low incidence of Covid in Britain”.
Visitors from Britain will still need a PCR or antigen test less than 48 hours old to be allowed into the country.
The French move comes after Germany said that travelers arriving there from the UK have to submit to a quarantine period of two weeks, regardless of whether they can provide a negative test result for the virus.
A French quarantine order is already in place for arrivals from Brazil, India, Argentina, Chile, South Africa, Colombia, Uruguay, Costa Rica, Bahrain, Turkey, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Nepal, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar.
Police are authorized to carry out random spot checks to ensure that quarantine rules are respected, with non-compliance punished with fines of up to 1,500 euros ($1,800).
The coronavirus variant first detected in India has now been officially recorded in 53 territories, a World Health Organization report showed Wednesday.