Tuesday, April 28, 2009

UK holiday firms cancel flights to Mexico

The Foreign Office advised against all but essential travel to flu-hit Mexico on Tuesday as holiday firms started cancelling flights and made plans to repatriate British tourists.

A honeymooning Scottish couple who recently returned from Cancun, one of the country's biggest beach resorts, have became the first in Britain to test positive for swine flu.

On its website, the Foreign Office also said routine consular and all visa services at its embassy in Mexico City had been suspended until further notice.

"British nationals resident in or visiting Mexico may wish to consider whether they should remain in Mexico at this time," it said.

Travel firms Thomson Holidays and First Choice said they had decided to repatriate their customers from Mexico and to cancel flights bound for Cancun from Gatwick and Manchester on Tuesday.

Thomas Cook said it was cancelling all flights to Mexico until May 5, but British Airways said it would continue to operate its services.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he would take part in a meeting of the government's COBRA emergency committee on Tuesday chaired by Health Secretary Alan Johnson.

"We have been preparing for this kind of scenario for many years. Britain is among the best prepared countries in the world," he told a news conference during a visit to Poland

WHO awaits U.S. confirmation on human flu spread

GENEVA, April 28 (Reuters) - The WHO said on Tuesday it awaited formal confirmation from U.S. authorities the new swine flu virus has spread significantly between people, a sign that could indicate an "imminent" influenza pandemic.

Confirmation infected people in two countries are spreading the new disease to their families or contacts in a sustained way would meet the World Health Organisation's criteria for declaring a phase 5 alert on its scale of 1 to 6.

The United Nations agency raised its pandemic alert level to phase 4 from phase 3 on Monday as the virus spread to Europe.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Monday some people who have had contact with confirmed cases were also developing flu-like symptoms.

"It appears, and I think we're still awaiting for a final confirmation from the U.S. authorities, but it appears that there's a number of cases in New York which appear to be human-to-human transmission," WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl told a news briefing.

Such secondary transmission of the virus was "probable", he later told reporters, adding: "If we have a confirmation from the United States or Canada, we could move to phase 5."

The emergency committee which recommended moving to phase 4 late on Monday -- a "turning point", according to Hartl -- was not scheduled to meet on Tuesday. But its experts could be convened at any time to make such decisions.

People have occasionally caught swine flu from a pig but it has stopped there. Avian influenza has occasionally spread from one person to just one other person and stopped there.

But the new H1N1 flu appears to be spreading beyond that limited chain, which is what worries the WHO.