Dominic Raab today unveiled a massive £75 million repatriation plan to bring back ‘tens of thousands’ of Britons stranded abroad because of the coronavirus crisis.
The Foreign Secretary said the UK government will now step in to provide ‘special charter flights’ from parts of the world where commercial flights are no longer in operation.
The government has struck a ‘new arrangement’ with British Airways, Easyjet, Jet2 and other airlines to provide the planes for the effort.
Speaking at the government’s daily coronavirus press conference in Number 10 Downing Street, Mr Raab said: ‘Under the arrangements that we are putting place we will target flights from a range of priority countries, starting this week.’
He continued: ‘Where commercial routes remain an option, airlines will be responsible for getting passengers home.
‘That means offering alternative flights at little to no cost where routes have been cancelled.
‘And it means allowing passengers to change tickets, including between carriers. So for those still in those countries where commercial options are still available, don’t wait, don’t run the risk of getting stranded, the airlines are standing by to help you, please book your tickets as soon as possible.
‘Where commercial flights are no longer running the government will provide the necessary financial support for special charter flights to bring UK nationals back home.
‘Once special charter flights have been arranged we will promote them through the government’s travel advice and by the British embassy or high commission in the relevant country.’
Up to a million Britons stranded abroad are still scrambling to return to the UK, including 6,000 who are marooned in New Zealand with thousands more trapped in Peru.
Dominic Rabb today unveiled a £75m effort to bring back home stranded Britons stuck abroad
The government has warned against all non-essential foreign travel since the outbreak worsened and has been urging people to make their own way back for more than a week.
However, many people have found it difficult, if not impossible, to buy commercial plane tickets after widespread flight cancellations while many of those who have found tickets have faced steep prices.
New Zealand has imposed one of the strictest lockdowns of any country to battle the deadly disease, and has grounded international flights, leaving thousands of Brits, including doctors and nurses, desperate to get home.
Mr Raab had already called Winston Peters, New Zealand’s Deputy Prime Minister, to ask for assistance in getting Brits home.
RAF voyager transport planes could be deployed to bring UK citizens home from places such as India and Peru, where conditions are thought to be deteriorating.
It comes as two repatriation flights carrying British passengers from Peru have landed at Heathrow Airport.
The British Airways flights left Lima on Sunday and landed at the west London hub on Monday morning.
The Foreign Office has not said how many passengers were on board, but said two more flights will leave Peru on Monday, arriving in the UK on Tuesday.
The repatriation flights were arranged by the Foreign Office in partnership with British Airways to rescue more than 1,000 stranded Britons.
Since the outbreak of coronavirus in Wuhan, the Foreign Office has helped to bring home almost 1,400 people on specially chartered government flights from China and Peru and 1,900 people on cruise ships from places including California, Brazil and Japan.
In the last week, the Foreign Office has helped more than 4,000 people to get back from Jamaica and more than 8,500 people to get back from Morocco.
Around 5,000 Britons successfully left Bali after the British team in Indonesia worked with their counterparts to unblock a visa permissions issue.
A number of Britons in New Zealand are using social media to call on the government, and specific airlines, to get them safely home.
Casi Cartwright and Lewis Dafydd who are currently stranded in Peru, like many other Brits
British critical care nurse Rachel Brockbank is stuck in Christchurch due to lockdown after visiting with family for sister’s wedding
A party of eight tourists – including young children – are trapped in Goa, thousands of miles from home, while their supplies of medicine and food dwindle
A British family has been left stranded in India after their flight home was cancelled due to Coronavirus.
The party of eight tourists – including young children – are trapped in Goa, thousands of miles from home, while their supplies of medicine and food dwindle.
Despite efforts to contact the British Embassy, the family say they have had ‘no sign of help’ as their holiday in paradise turns into a living nightmare.
They also claim to have been attacked by stick-wielding Indian police officers who told them ‘we can beat you now, no-one will care’ when they left their hotel to try to buy food.
An online petition to try to get the group home has already gathered hundreds of signatures.
Mother-of-two Chanttel Carrington, from Isle of Sheppey in Kent, said: ‘We are stranded with little money, and three of our party members are in need of prescribed medication.
‘We have tried to contact the British Embassy multiple times with no success.
‘There is no sign of help or support whatsoever.’
Other group members include Ms Carrington’s children Ivy-rose McCoy, six, and son George McCoy, four, as well as her partner Barney McCoy.
The rest are Ms Carrington’s parents Gary and Denise Carrington, aged 59 and 56 respectively, her sister Charley Carrington, 19, and Charley’s 18-year-old boyfriend Luke Manning.
They had gone on holiday to the coastal state of Goa, but their flight home last Monday, March 23, was cancelled as travel chaos amid the pandemic continued to snowball.
Ms Carrington claimed that she and Mr McCoy received rough treatment from local police when they went to get medication and food for their children, and were ordered back to their hotel.
She added: ‘We went to the shops to get some medicine and also some food for our children the police attacked my partner with sticks when we attempted to try and buy food and medicine.’
The children saw the spectacle and Ms Carrington said: ‘My son was crying and said are we going to die in this hotel?
‘The hotel is running out of food and the kids are starting to get poorly and distressed with the situation.’
Brits in New Zealand are using Twitter to try and get home by appealing to airlines and politicians.
A user Twitter user called Fen said: ‘Waking up to an email from @EmilyThornberry is the one thing that has given me hope that I will be able to return home. I can’t thank her enough for what she is trying to do for us all.’
And Shannon Rickards, said: ‘When @qatarairways have the chance to literally become THE BEST AIRLINE IN THE if they step up and get people home. Unlike who many of us will never fly with again. #britsinNZ #getushome.
Crispian Wilson at the Foreign Office has said that commercial routes are the only practical option for many Brits stranded abroad
Reece Hall, 24, from Cornwall, fell victim to a mugging and serious assault on February 26 in north Goa, leaving him with a fractured jaw, eye socket and leg injury, now severely infected
Labour MP Emily Thornberry tweeted today about Mr Raab’s expected repatriation plan
Dr Marion Lynch is one of many medical professionals currently in the country and has implored the government to get them home so they can help battle the coronavirus.
And critical care nurse Rachel Brockbank is currently stuck in New Zealand after visiting with her family for her sister’s wedding, but is desperate to get home.
She told the New Zealand Herald: ‘I want to go back. I don’t think my family want me to but I feel that’s where I should be. That’s where I’m needed.’
The Foreign Office has projected between 300,000 and one million Brits are currently trapped abroad, but there is no exact figure available as there is no method in place to be able to track everybody.
The latest effort emerged as the UK’s high commissioner in Australia, Vicky Treadell, warned there are at least 30,000 Britons in the country and a few planes ‘won’t do it’.
She tweeted: ‘Brits across Australia so no single point of departure. Keeping key airports and commercial airlines providing 1000s of seats between them is therefore our current priority.’
In the Philippines a Brit stranded abroad fears his wife and unborn baby will die because he claims the British Embassy is refusing to help the family get to hospital.
Desperate Tom Shelton’s Philippino wife Annie is eight months pregnant with his first baby.
She needs a Caesarean because their unborn son is upside down in the breech position.
But the couple, who have been running a guesthouse in El Nido, in the Philippines for the last two years, are now a six-hour drive away from hospital because of restrictions enforced to stop the spread of Covid-19.
Tom, 43, from Consett, Durham, says the British Embassy won’t help because his wife is not a British citizen.
He claims they have offered to support the family once the baby – who will be British – is born but Tom fears by then it could be too late.
The struggling family are now living in a hut to save money and depending on neighbours for food after the spread of coronavirus destroyed their livelihood.
‘My baby could die because of the lockdown,’ Tom said.
‘Annie is due on April 17 but could go into labour at any time, especially with all the stress of the situation.
‘The baby is feet first and its head could get stuck if she ends up giving birth at home with no assistance. My baby and my wife’s lives are at risk and yet no one will help me.’
British Nationals stuck in India said their plight is becoming ‘desperate’, with some claiming they have faced police brutality while attempting to get food and medical supplies.
Reece Hall, 24, a ground worker from Cornwall, fell victim to a mugging and serious assault on February 26 in Titos Lane, north Goa, leaving him with a fractured jaw, eye socket and a leg injury, which has now become severely infected.
Unable to leave his accommodation for regular treatment due to hostility towards tourists and strict government lock down measures, in place since Wednesday, Mr Hall’s open leg wound, which was caused when three muggers pushed him from his bike, is now badly inflamed.
Mr Hall said: ‘I’ve been avoid going outside ever since seeing videos of people getting beaten up and hearing stories from foreigners who have been beaten, (…) my leg is not looking good at the moment’.
‘I’m desperate to get a plane ticket home but it’s gone past the point of trying to get one now as they are all cancelled, all we can do is contact government officials. I’m surviving off one meal of rice a day.’
A 21-day lock down was announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday causing the immediate closure of shops, restaurants and many hotels.
Heidi Hawkins, 49, a carer from West Sussex stuck in south Goa, said: ‘The supermarket was rumoured to be open and it was heaving, no social distancing, every man for himself.
‘The police just came along and started smacking people with their sticks. So people are too scared to go out for food. When you hear of a shop that’s open you’re too scared to go there because of the police brutality.
‘We just need food and water and we’ve been left with no information.
‘I went to the police station in Colva to ask for information and the police threatened to put me behind bars. I was laughed at and ridiculed.
‘At home I’ve got my 22-year-old daughter who is highly anxious alone with her eight-week-old baby, her four-year-old daughter and my 19-year-old disabled daughter. She’s been stuck inside without food. While my 19-year-son, who is severely disabled is in an assisted living house and he is desperately homesick and doesn’t understand.
‘I am desperate to get to him and take him home. I need to get home for my babies, they need their mum.’