THE Scottish Government must give “serious thought” to border controls to stop travellers entering Scotland by landing elsewhere in the UK, the Health Secretary has said.

New quarantine rules in Scotland mean that from Monday, travellers from any country will be forced to self-isolate in a hotel for 10 days on arrival.

In England, only travellers arriving from so-called “red list” countries will need to quarantine, which means someone flying in from elsewhere could land in England and then cross the border into Scotland themselves without the need to self-isolate – and avoiding the £1750 hotel accommodation fee that goes with it.

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Discussions between the two governments are ongoing, but Health Secretary Jeane Freeman said Scotland may need to look at other options to prevent Covid-19 from being imported into the country.

Addressing the coronavirus briefing on Friday, she said: “We continue to discuss with the UK Government because we think their approach, which confines itself to the red zone areas, is insufficient and we continue to work with them to try and persuade them that they should adopt the tougher stance that we’re adopting.

“However while we do that, we do have to give serious thought to the options that may be available to us.

“Many will enter the UK via the major airport hubs in London, Manchester and elsewhere and will then travel to Scotland.

“So we will need to work through with the UK Government how that will be managed, how we will know that and if there is a need for other measures at the border. Of course that is an operational issue for our chief constable, he will be giving that come consideration but the decision around that should remain with him.”

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Freeman also used the briefing to reiterate that Scottish ministers are disappointed tighter regulations have not been put in place in England.

She said: “It’s deeply disappointing that as part of a family of equals, one partner isn’t prepared to help the other partner enforce the policy that they think is the right policy for the people they represent.

“The discussions will continue, because we are, as we have always been, keen where we can to reach a four-nation approach to deal with a virus that doesn’t respect boundaries and borders.

“But in the meantime, we will work through what the options are to mitigate where the UK Government stance creates a loophole in what the Scottish Government believes is exactly the right thing to do.

“The best solution is actually for all four nations of the UK to agree that the right way to do this, as other countries have done, is to make sure that all international arrivals have to undertake managed quarantine.”

With the regulations due to come into effect on Monday, the broad rules around who needs to quarantine, how they can do so and how much they will need to pay are known, but finer details still remain unresolved.

When asked about the plans yet to be finalised, the Health Secretary said: “The rules will be finalised in time, I can’t be clearer than that I’m afraid because these discussions are important discussions and they need to work their way through, but everyone is very conscious of Monday and are working really hard to make sure the rules are finalised in time, not only in time for Monday, but in time for people to know and understand them.”

It comes as another 67 Covid deaths were recorded in Scotland in the past 24 hours.

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Freeman said the total number of deaths under the official measurement is now 6666.

The Scottish Government reports all deaths where a patient dies within 28 days of testing positive for the virus.

There were also 830 new coronavirus cases recorded, accounting for 5.2% of the total number of tests carried out.

Of those there were 257 cases in Greater Glasgow and Clyde, 133 in Lanarkshire, 119 in Ayrshire and Arran and 100 in Lothian. The remaining cases were spread across nine other health board areas.

There were 1472 people in hospital with Covid, 27 fewer than the previous day, and 115 of those people were in intensive care – an increase of six.

Freeman also discussed the vaccine roll-out, with some positive news. As of 8.30am today 1,113,628 people have received their first dose, an increase of 64,881.

That figure represents the highest daily increase since the beginning of the vaccine roll-out.