LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) - Heathrow Airport's boss John
Holland-Kaye called on the British government to get travel
restarted as swiftly as possible, warning that the country was
an island but that it could not shut itself off from the world
for ever.
"We are an island nation - we cannot cut ourselves off from
the world for the foreseeable future," Holland-Kaye told the
BBC. "We've got to find a way of keeping people safe from a
second wave but also getting the economy going again."
He said a double testing programme could reduce the time of
the 14-day quarantine. One test at the airport, that could be up
and running in two weeks, and a second test at a health facility
5-8 days later to reduce quarantine time.
COVID-19, he said, had wrought a devastating impact on the
economy and the aviation industry, but that there were signs of
movement in the government on quarantine.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge, Editing by Paul Sandle)