IATA boss blames governments for prolonging travel crisis

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[May 28, 2021] PARIS/LONDON (Reuters) - The head of global airline industry body IATA blames overly risk-averse governments for prolonging the COVID-19 crisis for the travel sector but expects the outlook to brighten in the second half of the year.

Willie Walsh, CEO of International Airlines Group, speaks during the closing press briefing at the 2016 International Air Transport Association (IATA) Annual General Meeting (AGM) and World Air Transport Summit in Dublin, Ireland June 3, 2016. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne

IATA Director General Willie Walsh, the former boss of British Airways owner IAG, expects positive data on vaccine effectiveness to convince governments to start rolling back restrictions.

"There is some good evidence there to be optimistic that, going into the second half of this year, we will see a better environment that will allow more people to travel," he told Reuters on Friday.

Most international air travel remains depressed almost 18 months into the pandemic because of continuing restrictions.

Walsh, who took the top job at IATA in April, said that governments are being too risk-averse and need to change rules to reflect data showing that vaccinated travel or travel with testing poses little risk to a country's infection rate.

"The crisis in the airline industry, which was initially caused by a health pandemic, is now really a crisis caused by restrictions being imposed by government," Walsh said.

He singled out Britain in particular, citing rules that require people entering the UK from nearly all countries to take at least two coronavirus tests and enter quarantine. Walsh also hit out at what he said was "incredible farcical confusion" created by mixed political messages on travel.

Many countries on Britain's "amber list" for medium-risk travel have very, very low transmission rates, said Walsh.

"If I was vaccinated, I wouldn't hesitate to fly to these countries," he said of places such as the United States, Spain, France and Italy, which were top destinations for Britons before the pandemic.

Britain and the United States both have high vaccination levels, which Walsh said gives him confidence that a travel corridor could be opened between the countries in June.

"I think there's a good reason to be optimistic that we should be able to see the UK and U.S. open transatlantic flying again," he said.

(Reporting by Sarah Young in London and Tim Hepher and Laurence Frost in Paris; Editing by David Goodman)

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