Now Man City fans on Ryanair flights are ordered to self-isolate after THREE planeloads of Chelsea supporters coming back from Porto were ordered into quarantine after testing positive - as country is axed from UK's Green list

  • Three planes full of Chelsea fans returning from Champions League final in Portugal told to self-isolate
  • Manchester City supporters travelling on Ryanair flight from Porto to Manchester also told to self-isolate     
  • Portugal to be removed from the 'green list' and dropped o 'amber list' amid concerns about rising infections
  • It's unclear how many positive cases have been reported among more than 12,000 football fans who travelledHundreds of Manchester City and Chelsea fans who travelled to Portugal for the Champions League final last weekend have been ordered to self-isolate for 10 days - as the country is axed from the UK's Green List.  

    Supporters who travelled on the 9am Ryanair flight from Porto to Manchester on Sunday morning have been contacted by the NHS's Test and Trace app and told to self-isolate alongside three planeloads of Chelsea fans, leading to fears that all 12,000 supporters who travelled from the UK to Lisbon and back could be affected. 

    It is unclear how many supporters have tested positive so far. 

    At least six planes could be affected, with fans suggesting passengers on three Chelsea planes, two Manchester City planes and one Ryanair flight have been contacted by the NHS app. 

    Both clubs organised flights for their supporters though some travelled independently. 

    It is thought Chelsea put on 10 planes for around 3,000 supporters with Manchester City putting on a similar number.

    Chelsea fans were offered a £199 travel package through the club on top of the cost of the match ticket.

    Photos from the weekend showed fans coming together both before and after the final, with very little social distancing as they crammed into squares and near bars. 

    The source of a potential outbreak has yet to be identified, however.  

    Chelsea fans have gone online to share their experiences and concerns since returning to the UK on Sunday. One posted: 'It seems someone who was on our return flight has tested positive.' 

    'Anyone else been captured by NHS track and trace since getting back from Porto?' one posted on Facebook. 'Despite two vaccinations, a negative test and no symptoms I've got to self-isolate for 10 days ...Deep Joy!' 

    And another Blues supporter, who was on a different flight, said: 'My daughter myself got alerted via nhs app this morning. Self-isolate for 7 days.'

    A fan on a third flight said he had also been contacted by the NHS tracing service.

    Meanwhile, Manchester City supporters took to a fan forum to share their shock at receiving the messages from the track and trace app. 

    One wrote: 'I was on (club) flight 5, I know 4 others on the same flight that have been contacted by Track & Trace. 

    'I've had a text, email and call already. Have to book another Test (with NHS) and isolate until 23.59pm on 8th June. 

    'Still not had results from Day 2 test and hoping eveything is negative so can get back to normal next week.'

    Another said: 'Had the message via the App yesterday saying isolate due to close contact. Still waiting for my 2 day test but isolating regardless.' 

    More than 12,000 English fans visited Porto for the weekend to watch the match with others simply there to soak up the atmosphere in the bars and restaurants by the Douro River in north west Portugal.

    Fans have expressed surprise at reports of positive covid tests because supporters were subjected to a strict testing regime before the match and on their return to the UK.

    Testing included a PCR test within 72 hours before flying to Portugal, a PCR 72 hours before the match kicking off and a lateral flow test 48 hours before.

    Afterwards, fans were also ordered to take a lateral flow test 72 hours before the return flight to London and a PCR test on day two after getting back. One possibility to explain the outbreak is results from day two testing coming back today.   

    The match was staged in Portugal after the original venue, the Ataturk Stadium in Istanbul, had to give the game up following a second wave of coronavirus in Turkey.

    Efforts to move the match to Wembley foundered after UEFA insisted 2,000 staff and VIPs must be accommodated and the UK government refused to waive quarantine requirements

    Portugal's government has kept bars and night clubs closed and still recommend people working from home but the country has now lost its place on the UK's 'green list'. 

    It comes as holidaymakers face a series of blows today as it was revealed that no countries will be added to the UK's 'green list' today - while Portugal is to be removed.   

    In a brutal overhaul, MailOnline understands that the only major holiday destination in the lowest bracket is being axed - with sources suggesting the new strain identified in the country was a significant factor in the decision.

    How did Manchester City and Chelsea fans end up in self-isolation? Where did they catch Covid? And what variant did they bring back?

    Flights put on by both teams departed the UK for Porto on the day of the game, last Saturday, May 29, and came back immediately after. Some fans travelled independently, including on a Ryanair flight which has been affected. 

    There were 6,000 tickets allocated to both teams for travelling fans with the Portugese government saying they must all travel as part of the group and stay in a 'match bubble' on the day before getting tested for Covid and flying home straight after the match.

    Fans yesterday, June 2, posted messages on a fan forum saying they had been sent messages by NHS Test & Trace telling them to self-isolate because they had been close to someone who tested positive for the virus.

    WERE THEY TESTED?

    All passengers had to take a PCR Covid test within three days before they flew. Anyone with a positive result or no result should not have been allowed to travel.

    The same test result was allowed to be used for their return journey and Government rules say they should do swab tests on day 2 (May 31 or June 1) and day 8 (June 6) after arriving home. It is unknown how well this is enforced.

    HOW DID PEOPLE TEST POSITIVE SO QUICKLY?  

    People were tested before departure and not allowed to go if they had a negative result so, if the system worked, any positive tests should have come after the trip – although tests aren't perfect and up to half may get an incorrect result, depending on the test type. 

    It generally takes a day to get a test result back – or longer if it's a home test – and then contact tracing takes place afterwards, so it's unlikely the process would be fast enough for the positive tests to come any later than Tuesday, June 1.

    This suggests the positives were among people who got tested on the day they got back or took a test before they left without getting the result. The day 2 return tests are postal tests so are unlikely to have been done in time.

    IS IT LIKELY THEY CAUGHT THE VIRUS IN PORTUGAL?

    It's difficult to know when people caught coronavirus but the gathering of thousands of people at the game in Portugal makes it a likely spreading event.

    However, it generally takes four to five days for the virus to 'incubate' in someone before they are fully infected and start to show symptoms, if they are symptomatic.

    During this incubation period people might be less likely to test positive because they don't have much of the virus in their body.

    It's possible that: 

    A) Someone caught the virus shortly before taking their pre-departure test, tested negative because they were in the incubation period, went to Portugal without knowing they had it, then tested positive afterwards.

    B) Someone caught the virus in Portugal and managed to test positive just one or two days later.

    C) Someone caught the virus in Britain after taking their test but before departing, then got tested when they got home.

    D) Someone who was positive before flying got an incorrect negative test result. This generally happens to between three and five out of 10 people who are tested once and are not physically ill at the time.

    WILL THEY HAVE CAUGHT A NEW VARIANT?

    The dominant variant in Portugal is the Kent/England variant B117, which makes up 87 per cent of cases there, according to the Portugese department of health, so it's likely that anyone infected there would catch this one.

    Although not dominant any more in the UK, pushed out by the Indian variant, the Kent strain is well understood and vaccines protect well against it.

    The country also has the South AfricaN B1351 and Brazilian P1 strains, which worry health officials, but these are present in small numbers in the UK, too. Portugal isn't known to have any dangerous new variants that haven't been found in Britain already. 

    A coronavirus variant that is being linked to Nepal has also been recorded in Portugal.  

    WHAT HAPPENS NOW? 

    Any fans who have been in close contact with someone who later tested positive will be contacted by NHS Test & Trace and told to isolate for 10 days after the contact happened.

    This can come by phone call, email, text or notification through the NHS app if both people have it and the positive tester logs their result online.

    Other people from the UK can be contacted by Test & Trace if they were in Portugal when the contact happened, but people living in Portugal will likely be outside of the programme's scope. 

    The self-isolation period works in the same way as it does if someone is exposed in the UK, and it applies even to fully vaccinated people or those who have already had the virus. It is generally not policed and relies on people complying in good faith. No countries are being added to the 'green list', dashing hopes that places such as Malta, Jamaica and Grenada could be added to the roster.

    And more countries are being put on the 'red list' that means returning travellers must go into quarantine hotels. 

    They are thought to be Egypt, Sri Lanka, Costa Rica, Bahrain, Sudan, Trinidad and Tobago and Afghanistan. 

    It comes amid alarm that a coronavirus variant linked to Nepal could pose a fresh threat to the escape from lockdown.

    At least 20 cases of the strain, which combines mutations from the Indian and South African versions, have been spotted in the UK. 

    And a case has been identified in Portugal - which does far less genomic screening than Britain. 

    Hundreds of Chelsea fans have been ordered to self-isolate after returning from the Champions League final in Portugal amid fears holidaymakers faced a series of blows to their summer plans

    Manchester football Fans seen drinking before the Champions League final in Portugal on Saturday evening. Some 6,000 Manchester city fans travelled to the country

    Manchester football Fans seen drinking before the Champions League final in Portugal on Saturday evening. Some 6,000 Manchester city fans travelled to the country 

    Portugal (pictured: A beach in Cascais near Lisbon) was dropped from the UK's travel green list today - in a move that will be a bitter blow to millions of Britons hoping for a holiday abroad this summer

    Portugal (pictured: A beach in Cascais near Lisbon) was dropped from the UK's travel green list today - in a move that will be a bitter blow to millions of Britons hoping for a holiday abroad this summer

    Meanwhile, Labour has renewed demands for the 'amber list' to be scrapped to prevent mutant strains from being imported.

    And in another setback for travellers the EU has again delayed a decision on whether the UK will be added to its 'white list' of safe countries from which leisure travel is welcome. 

    Brussels recommends that member states lift travel restrictions on people coming from countries on its 'white list' - although member states are not obliged to follow the guidance and many do not.

    Currently the list includes Israel, New Zealand, Rwanda, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand and Australia.

    However, there are reports that Japan is about to be added, even though much of the country has been in lockdown.

    The UK's status is now expected to be reviewed again on June 14. 

    With Portugal moved on to the amber list after ministers met today, people returning from the country will have to self-isolate for 10 days as well as paying for coronavirus tests.

    It will be a huge kick in the teeth to Britons who have already booked a holiday in hot spots such as the Algarve, believing they will be able to return quarantine free.And it will also be another damaging blow to the already struggling travel industry, which had hoped for more countries to be added to the green list this month. 

    Yesterday Portugal saw its highest daily number of cases since March. And the country currently has a case rate of around 37 infections per 100,000 people - higher than the UK's rate of 34.5.

    The final decision will be based on an assessment from the Joint Biosecurity Centre (JBC).

    Asked about the green list yesterday, Mr Johnson said: 'You've got to wait and see what the JBC says and what the recommendations are about travel. 

    'We're going to try to allow people to travel, as I know that many people want to, but we've got to be cautious and we've got to continue to put countries on the red list, on the amber list, when that is necessary.

    'I want you to know we will have no hesitation in moving countries from the green list to the amber list to the red list, if we have to do so. 

    'The priority is to continue the vaccination rollout, to protect the people of this country.'

    Instead of being put on the amber list, ministers could opt to put Portugal on a new 'watch list'.

    This would allow holiday-makers time to react before the country is moved from green to amber.

    In the past, holiday-makers have normally been given days - and sometimes up to a week - to return to the UK from countries where travel restrictions have been changed.

    While Portugal is one of the countries facing being moved up the Government's travel list scale, Malta could be one of the few countries moved down.

    The Mediterranean island, a popular destination for British tourists, is currently on the amber list.

    But with high vaccination levels and low infections it appears the most likely country to be moved down.

    The Cayman Islands, Grenada, British Virgin Islands, Finland and some Caribbean islands are also among the possibles for the green list. 

    Cyprus' deputy tourism minister yesterday said the country 'absolutely deserves' to be in the loosest category. 

    After today, the green list – which currently contains 12 countries – will not be reviewed until the week running up to June 28. 

    If there is not a significant expansion then, it will be July 19 or 20 before there is another chance for more destinations to make it on to the list. 

    The full list of countries on the government's green, amber and red travel lists

    The full list of countries on the government's green, amber and red travel lists 

    Covid cases jumped by more than 36 per cent in a week today, the eighth day in a row they have been above 3,000 and the second day in less than a week they have reached more than 4,000

    Covid cases jumped by more than 36 per cent in a week today, the eighth day in a row they have been above 3,000 and the second day in less than a week they have reached more than 4,000

    Twelve more lives were also lost to the virus today — rising a third on last Wednesday's figure — after yesterday's recording of zero bolstered calls for No10 to stick with its roadmap

    Twelve more lives were also lost to the virus today — rising a third on last Wednesday's figure — after yesterday's recording of zero bolstered calls for No10 to stick with its roadmap

    The next destinations travel experts are tipping for 'green list' status 

    Travel industry experts have highlighted eight new destinations that could be added to the government's green list.

    With Covid cases falling or staying at low levels in these holiday hot spots, Brits could be enjoying a summer in:  

    Canary Islands

    Balearic Islands

    Malta

    Morocco

    Finland

    Jamaica

    Barbados

    Grenada 

    Today, Cyprus' deputy tourism minister said the country 'absolutely deserves' to be on the UK's travel green list.

    Travel industry experts have suggested that case levels are low enough to move the countries down.

    However, Spain and Greece, which are two of the most popular tourist destinations of British holiday-makers, look set to remain on the amber list. 

    Meanwhile, Bahrain, Costa Rica and Vietnam could be moved up to the red list.

    While amber arrivals are required to self-isolate for 10 days, and complete two PCR tests, arrivals from red list countries must stay in a quarantine hotel once landing in the UK - at the cost of £1,750 per person.   

    Robert Boyle, former director of strategy at British Airways' parent company IAG, said a number of summer hotspots could be added to the green tier.

    He wrote in a blog post: 'It still seems very likely that whilst Spain and Greece will not make it onto the green list, many of their islands will, due to lower case rates and higher vaccinations than on the mainland.'

    Mr Boyle added: 'Malta, Finland and Slovakia are fairly safe bets, based on high testing rates and low reported cases.'

    Paul Charles, chief executive of travel consultancy The PC Agency, said a number of popular holiday destinations 'really deserve' to be moved to the low-risk tier.

    He expects additions to the green list to include the Greek islands of Zante, Rhodes and Kos, the Caribbean islands of Grenada and Antigua, plus Malta and Finland.

    But he said he would be 'surprised' if Spain's Balearic Islands – including Ibiza, Majorca and Menorca – were added on Thursday.

    'They're hugely popular and I'm not sure the Government is ready to encourage so much travel at the moment,' he told the PA news agency.

    Portugal is the only viable major tourist destination currently on the green list, but there have been reports it could be downgraded to amber.

    The Government has urged people to avoid non-essential travel to amber and red countries.

    Travellers returning from amber list locations – which include popular hotspots such as Spain, France, Italy and Greece – must quarantine at home for 10 days and take two post-arrival tests.

    Several additions to the red list are expected on Thursday.

    Mr Boyle explained that Bahrain, Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago and Kuwait 'ought to be on the list' due to 'very high infection rates', whereas Mr Charles warned that Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia could be added as there are 'signs of increased infection in many parts of Asia'. 

    There is speculation that Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago, Kuwait and Bahrain might be added to the red list tomorrow

    There is speculation that Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago, Kuwait and Bahrain might be added to the red list tomorrowPeople returning to the UK from a red country are required to spend 10 nights in a quarantine hotel, at a cost of £1,750 for solo travellers.

    Assessments of travel lists are based on a range of factors, including the proportion of a population that has been vaccinated, rates of infection, emerging new variants, and access to reliable scientific data and genomic sequencing.

    Home Office minister Victoria Atkins said the public should 'exercise their common sense' about travelling abroad.

    She told Times Radio: 'We all want to get back to normality, pre-pandemic normality.

    'But I think (we) all understand we've got to take careful steps to do that.'

    Yesterday Cyprus' deputy tourism minister said the country 'absolutely deserved' be put on the UK's travel green list.

    Savvas Perdios told the Telegraph: 'Cyprus absolutely deserves to be green-listed.

    'We have made a lot of progress, especially over the last month.'

    The country's current Covid infection rate sits at 36.95 per 100,000 people - on par with green-listed Portugal (35.58) and the UK (34.5).

    Yesterday, the country, which went into a short two-week firebreaker lockdown in May, reported just 58 new daily cases.

    And Mr Perdios said around half of the country's 875,000 population has been vaccinated so far.

    It comes as the Mail today revealed how foreign holidays are under threat because ministers are worried about a new Covid variant.

    Scientists have alerted ministers to the mutant strain – thought to have originated in Nepal – which has apparently spread to Europe. They fear the strain is resistant to vaccines.

    But a member of the Government's SAGE committee of experts said officials should not be overly concerned. He added: 'There are thousands of variants. This is a virus that is changing all the time.' 

    Health workers carry Ramjee Kunwar, 65, a Covid-19 patient from a helicopter to an ambulance after being airlifted from Pokhara to Kathmandu due to health complications

    Health workers carry Ramjee Kunwar, 65, a Covid-19 patient from a helicopter to an ambulance after being airlifted from Pokhara to Kathmandu due to health complications

    Scientists have alerted ministers to the mutant strain – thought to have originated in Nepal – which has apparently spread to Europe. Pictured: Passengers arriving at Heathrow Airport

    Scientists have alerted ministers to the mutant strain – thought to have originated in Nepal – which has apparently spread to Europe. Pictured: Passengers arriving at Heathrow Airport 

    And Tory peer Baroness Ruby McGregor-Smith, chairman of the Airport Operators' Association, said: 'How many more variants have we got to be worried about? What matters is data and the success of our vaccination programme.'

    The Government will today update its 'green list' of countries holidaymakers can visit without having to go into quarantine.

    Whitehall sources said additions to the list will be 'extremely limited' amid concern over the Nepal strain and the slower rollout of vaccines across Europe.

    There are even fears Portugal could lose its green status today, as the Nepal variant may have been detected there

    It means holidays to the Continent may be severely restricted until August – the month now being targeted by ministers for a significant reboot of foreign travel.

    The development is a huge blow for the travel industry, which has been brought to its knees by the pandemic.

    Industry leaders and MPs have warned that more than a million jobs are at risk if most of the summer season is lost, with billions more wiped from the UK economy. 

    Last night, even government advisers said the UK could not keep panicking every time a new variant emerges. Professor Sir John Bell said ministers should avoid 'scampering down a rabbit hole' when new strains are detected, and instead focus on hospitalisations, serious disease and deaths. 

    Last night, MPs and industry expressed alarm at the prospect of foreign summer holidays slipping away. 

    Tory MP Henry Smith, chairman of the all-party Future of Aviation group of MPs, and whose constituency includes Gatwick, said: 'After a devastating year for our aviation, travel and tourism industries, this will come as a hammer blow to an industry that is close to breaking point.

    'Far from benefiting from a vaccine dividend, this reinforces that our overly cautious approach to international travel is a restart in name only.

    'We must ensure that we avoid a summer shutdown that will cause irreversible damage to businesses and communities who rely on international travel.' 

    HAVE SUN-SEEKING BRITS PLAYED A ROLE IN PORTUGAL'S RISING INFECTION RATE? 

    Portugal's Covid infection rates were already rising before Brits were allowed to holiday in the country, data shows.  

    The country was one of the 12 countries to be named by Grant Shapps on May 7 as on the green list.

    Since May 17, UK citizens have been allowed to travel to the Algarve and Portugal's other popular tourism hotspots quarantine-free.

    They were still required to take a Covid test before and after travelling, meaning only very few would have been able to bring the virus into the country.

    Yesterday Portugal recorded 724 infections yesterday, its highest daily number of cases since March . 

    And the country currently has a case rate of around 37 infections per 100,000 people - higher than the UK's rate of 34.5. 

    But cases have been rising steadily since May 11 — six days before Brits were allowed to travel to the country — when there were 268 positive tests.

    Portugal's rising Covid infection rates have been linked to Brits holidaying in the country but cases were already rising before it was green-listed for travel

    Portugal's rising Covid infection rates have been linked to Brits holidaying in the country but cases were already rising before it was green-listed for travel

    Graph shows: Portugal's confirmed Covid cases per million people since the start of the pandemic

    Graph shows: Portugal's confirmed Covid cases per million people since the start of the pandemic

    Portugal recorded just 377 new Covid cases on May 7, when it was announced it would be on the UK's green list. 

    Since then cases have risen 56 per cent, with cases rising 34 per cent in the last fortnight in contrast to neighbouring Spain — on the amber list — which has seen infections drop.

    Its average cases per million people dipped below the UK's briefly from May 10 (31.98) to May 13 (34.38) for the first time since April 7.

    But they began steadily rising before Britons were allowed to enter the country without quarantining on return.

    And the rate of increase has remained stable since that date, increasing 20.3 per cent in the last week.

    Portugal and Brunei are the only two countries of the 12 on the green list to have seen infections rise since May 17. 

    Portugal's average cases per million people dipped below the UK's briefly from May 10 (31.98) to May 13 (34.38) for the first time since April 7

    Portugal's average cases per million people dipped below the UK's briefly from May 10 (31.98) to May 13 (34.38) for the first time since April 7

    Some 16,500 football fans traveled to Porto last weekend for the Champions League final between Chelsea and Manchester City.

    Thousands packed the city's bars, with many pictured ignoring social distancing rules and not wearing face masks. 

    It forced Porto's health authority to tell residents who were near the fan zones to 'reduce contacts' over the next few weeks and look out for Covid symptoms.

    But any effect on cases from the British fans travelling to the country will not be recorded for another few days due to the incubation period.

    It takes about five days for the virus to take hold in the body after initial infection. 

    Just 20.8 per cent of people in Portugal have been fully vaccinated — compared to nearly half in the UK — while only 43.2 per cent have had their first jab — compared to more than three quarters of Brits.

    And it is too early to tell whether the country's swell in cases has come as a result of the Indian variant, with the results of genomic testing of Brits returning to the UK expected today.

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