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File image of Taoiseach Micheál Martin speaking earlier this month. Rollingnews.ie

Travellers into Ireland to be subject to mandatory quarantine at home or in a hotel, government says

Micheál Martin announced the extended measures this afternoon.

LAST UPDATE | 26 Jan 2021

THE TAOISEACH HAS confirmed that Level 5 measures will remain in place until 5 March.

Micheál Martin said at a press conference this afternoon that the restrictions had been shown to have a positive effect in recent weeks, but that an extension of Level 5 was necessary if the number of patients in hospital was to be driven downwards.

A further tightening of incoming travel has also been confirmed, including mandatory 14-day quarantine in hotels for arrivals from ‘high-risk areas’ such as Brazil and South Africa and those without a negative PCR test.

The government also said that those entering the country from non ‘high-risk’ areas will be required to self-isolate at home by law for the first time.

Arrivals into the country from other red region countries, will still require a negative PCR test, but they will be allowed to leave their home if they can produce a negative PCR test five days after they arrive into the country.

These regulations will apply to anyone who travels into Ireland from any port or airport on the island, including ports and airports in Northern Ireland.

Visa-free travel from South Africa and Brazil will also be suspended until 5 March, while extra gardaí will be deployed at airports and ports to police the new travel restrictions.

“We must stay focused on the measures that will bring this disease under control, and which we as a country are in a position to deliver,” Martin said.

“The road we are on is hard. The length of time that we’ve had to live with restrictions and the proximity of vaccination makes it even harder, but it is the road we must take together.

“We have done it before. And we can do it again.”

The measures were agreed by members of the Cabinet today.

Tánaiste Leo Varadkar said it would take a number of weeks for the travel restrictions to become operational, due to a need by the government to find locations where incoming passengers can quarantine.

In a statement, the Irish Hotels Federation (IHF) said that the sector will engage with authorities with regards to providing quarantine facilities. 

“We expect that the number of hotels required will be small and in the vicinity of airports. Participation will be a matter for individual hotels.,” IHF president Elaina Fitzgerald Kane said. 

When considering the provision of facilities for quarantine purposes, decisions will have to be made around the suitability of the property from a structural and location perspective and some of the current safety protocols may need to be reviewed, depending on the nature of the support that is being provided.

 

Border 

Transport Minister Eamon Ryan also suggested that gardaí will be able to turn people back at the border if they come from the North for a non-essential journey, but that this will not happen if individuals are travelling to an airport.

The Taoiseach said that the majority of people travelling into the country at present are Irish citizens, but added that “quite a number went on holidays during the Christmas period and are coming back”.

“I think that’s why a lot of the emphasis is on actually what we can do domestically to reduce non-essential travel by our citizens overseas, it’s a very important aspect of this and that’s why the extra garda checkpoints at airports and ports will have an impact.”

It is understood that depending on the pattern of the virus, the economy will be re-opened on a phased basis from April.

This would be similar to the approach taken heading into the summer last year, with guidance on home visits gradually relaxed and more shops and services gradually opening up. 

Speaking last night, Tánaiste Leo Varadkar said that “what we’ll have to do on this occasion is any easing of restrictions which will have to be very, very, slow. More like the way we eased restrictions after the first wave”.

“It might start off very slow, maybe just with some retail, with maybe being allowed to meet two people outdoors, it’s going to be a very slow unwinding of restrictions but you know if we can get the figures down very low, that becomes a possibility,” he said on RTÉ’s Claire Byrne Live programme. 

Government sources state that people need to understand that it won’t be a return to normality if restrictions do begin to lift this year, even with the vaccine numbers on the rise. 

With reporting by Christina Finn,  Orla Dwyer and Rónán Duffy

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    Mute Soccer T's
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:10 PM

    If any group deserves improved conditions it’s nurses. Nurses work an average of 1872 hours annually compared to 735 hours for a teacher yet it’s the teachers making all the noise….baffling!

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    Mute Al Ca
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:11 PM

    @Soccer T’s: If teaching is so easy feel free to become a teacher.

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    Mute Soccer T's
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:15 PM

    If it’s so difficult feel free to change career

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    Mute Al Ca
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:16 PM

    @Soccer T’s: Why should I stop being a doctor because teaching is a challenging job?

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    Mute Al Ca
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:10 PM

    Patients will die for every minute nurses go on strike.

    I hope the union thinks twice before beginning a genocide of our most vulnerable.

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    Mute FifiJamming
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:12 PM

    A little hyperbolic there al…

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    Mute Darragh Mcnamara
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:13 PM

    @Al Ca: sure the government via cuts to support have done that last few years.

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    Mute Al Ca
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:15 PM

    @FifiJamming: Are you claiming that nurses don’t save lives? That’s a little insulting.

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    Mute Soccer T's
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:18 PM

    @Al Based on your comment, if nurses go on strike for 24 hours, 1440 people will die. Damn!

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    Mute Al Ca
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:23 PM

    @Soccer T’s: The idea that 1,440 people would need urgent hospital care out of a population of 4.5 million is hardly shocking.

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    Mute Soccer T's
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:28 PM

    They won’t need care if they are all dead but they will need undertakers. Another career option for you

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    Mute Siobhan Mckenna
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    Mar 1st 2017, 8:53 PM

    Well you’d better be a good Doctor.
    Do YOUR job well and stop undermining others.

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    Mute Siobhan Mckenna
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    Mar 1st 2017, 9:04 PM

    You said die… yes they’ll obv have urgent care, but you did say they’d all die because of the strike. Now if your arbitrary number is on top of the norm – then yes, your statement is hyperbolic

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    Mute Orla Croke
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    Mar 1st 2017, 9:23 PM

    Oh god the world is just full of ignorant people. I am surprised daily even though I shouldn’t be shocked by it anymore.

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    Mute Orla Croke
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    Mar 1st 2017, 9:25 PM

    And that comment is pointed directly at Al Ca. I genuinely don’t understand someone commenting on something they clearly have no knowledge about.

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    Mute Jeanette McDonald
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    Mar 1st 2017, 11:14 PM

    I bet the nurses you work with love you Al!

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    Mute Catherine Rotte-Murray
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    Mar 2nd 2017, 1:37 AM

    Article is a it misleading – it’s a work to rule FROM Tuesday mArch 7th, with one day work stoppages (strike days) to be announced. It’s not a work to rule ON Tuesday March 7th!
    Unless the INMO talks with the WRC lead to a resolution on safe staffing, recruitment and retention measures that work.
    https://www.inmo.ie/Home/Index/217/12858

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