THOUSANDS of lorry drivers are set to spend Christmas stranded in Kent as the UK Government has indicated queues will not start to move for at least another 24 hours.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said the 6000 lorries, some of which have been parked on the A2 since Sunday, will begin moving on Christmas Day, as French firemen and the British military work with Test and Trace to continue testing drivers.
Hauliers must return a negative coronavirus result carried out within the past 72 hours before crossing the Channel.
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The head of the Road Haulage Association has accused France of treating drivers like “pawns in a larger game” as the UK stands on the cusp of brokering a deal with the EU – an allegation the French have repeatedly denied.
Richard Burnett sympathised with the hauliers, a small number of whom clashed with police this week after being stopped from heading to the continent, adding: “It just feels like it’s a lever the French have pulled specifically around the Brexit negotiations.”
He told the BBC: “We understand that we don’t want the virus to spread but I think we have to think practically about some of the reasons why this has happened.”
Burnett added he was “relieved” hauliers would be able to move after French authorities demanded a negative test following the emergence of a new more transmissible coronavirus strain in the UK, but added it would “take some time” to clear the backlog.
He added lorry drivers’ rates of coronavirus infection are much lower than those of workers in other sectors, at between 3% and 6%.
Shapps said France and the UK had agreed to keep the border open at Dover, the Eurotunnel and Calais “throughout Christmas” to get citizens and hauliers cleared “as soon as possible”.
He promised ferries will sail on Christmas Day and Boxing Day, as 26 French firemen brought 10,000 extra tests to the port today to help speed up the process.
A disused airfield at Manston has become the main testing centre for hauliers, with drivers required to self-administer swabs in their cabs under supervision.
Trucks began entering the Eurotunnel again yesterday after drivers started producing negative Covid-19 results, but it is feared it could take days to carry out all the tests.
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