Jet2.com chief among airline bosses to write to Boris Johnson asking for international travel to open within weeks
Bosses from leading UK airlines are asking the Prime Minister to give them the green light for international travel within weeks, it has been reported.

The chief executive of Jet2.com Stephen Heapy joined his contemporaries at British Airways, easyJet, Loganair, Ryanair, Tui and Virgin Atlantic - as well as trade body Airlines UK - to write to Boris Johnson as ministers made it clear the ban on foreign travel will be in place until at least May 17.
When it is lifted it will be replaced by a risk-based “traffic light” system with red, amber and green ratings for countries around the world.
Airline chiefs said in their letter, published by The Sun, they recognised restriction-free universal travel may not be possible by May 17.
“However there can be no economic recovery without aviation, and we are confident we now have the tools to enable a safe and meaningful restart to travel in May – allowing us to return to our job of reuniting friends and family, supporting trade and business and allowing Britons to enjoy a well-earned break again,” the letter stated.
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It added: “We believe vaccinated passengers should not be subject to travel restrictions and that testing can also reduce the barriers to travel including for areas that are considered to present some risk. Only very high-risk areas would be subject to more stringent measures”
On Monday, the PM is expected to outline the Government’s approach for easing restrictions on foreign travel when its global travel task force reports on April 12.
The traffic light system will be based on a range of factors – including the proportion of the population that has been vaccinated, rates of infection, emerging new variants and the country’s access to reliable scientific data and genomic sequencing.
Travellers arriving from countries rated “green” will not be required to isolate – although pre-departure and post-arrival tests will still be needed.
For those classed as “amber” or “red”, the restrictions will remain as they are with arrivals required to isolate or enter quarantine.
The letter comes after the same group of airline bosses on February 18 called on the Government to outline a recovery road map for the industry so they could plan for the summer.
At the same time they called for further economic support for UK aviation to stimulate and strengthen any recovery when it comes.