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UK’s largest airport drops mandatory face masks for passengers

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The UK’s largest airport, Heathrow Airport no longer requires people to wear face masks at its terminals, railway stations or office buildings but will continue to recommend they do.

British Airways and Virgin Atlantic are the latest airlines to relax their policies on face coverings.

Passengers must still wear them on board flights if the country they’re travelling to requires it.

‘Plan B’ measures ended in late January, meaning masks were no longer legally required on some public transport and in shops.

However, Heathrow, which handles a large number of international flights, had kept the rule that face coverings must be worn, until this week.

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Heathrow’s chief operating officer, Emma Gilthorpe, said the airport was pleased to move away from mandatory face mask requirements.

She said: “While we still recommend wearing them, we can be confident the investments we’ve made in Covid-secure measures – some of which aren’t always visible – combined with the fantastic protection provided by the vaccine will continue to keep people safe while travelling.”

Heathrow said that if there was a significant rise in infections or a future variant of concern, it would not hesitate to bring the mandate back.

The airport said face coverings would remain available for people who still want to wear them.

Virgin Atlantic said it was also changing its face mask policy from Wednesday, making it a personal choice for customers and crew to wear them on board.

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Virgin Atlantic’s chief customer and operating officer, Corneel Koster, said its policy would be introduced gradually. He encouraged passengers to respect each other’s choices.

From Wednesday, British Airways (BA) customers will only have to wear a face covering on board flights if the destination they’re travelling to requires it.

BA’s chief operating officer, Jason Mahoney, said the move was “welcome” and “a positive step forward”.

Earlier this month, the airline and tour operator Jet2 relaxed its rules on face coverings for flights to and from England and Northern Ireland. Since Friday, Tui has done the same.

The aviation industry is hoping that the easing of travel restrictions will lift the curtain on a busy summer, after two years of major disruption due to the pandemic.

From Friday, all travellers will be able to enter the UK without filling in a passenger locator form or taking Covid tests.

Holidaymakers will still need to be aware of and follow, and rules where they’re going.

On Friday Heathrow’s chief executive John Holland-Kaye said the recovery of aviation “remains overshadowed by war and Covid uncertainty”.

The airport’s passenger numbers last month were still nearly 50% down on pre-pandemic levels.

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