General filters
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in excerpt
Search in content
Source
Filter by Release categories
Accessible Tourism
Africa Tourism
Africa Travel
Agriculture
AI
Association News
Aviation
Awards
Business Travel
Climate
Conservation
Corporate
Culture
Ecotourism
Events
Female Travel
Food and Dining
Food and Drink
Hacks
Hospitality and Travel
Hotelier
Industry Insights
Insurance
Leadership
Leisure Travel and Tourism
Cruising
LGBTQ+
Lifestyle and Entertainment
Luxury Travel
MICE
Press releases
Responsible Tourism
South Africa
South Africa Travel
Sport
Sustainable Travel
Tax
Tech
Tips
Trade News
Travel and Tourism
Travel News
Travel Tips
Trends
Women

SATSA calls on the UK Government to take immediate action over the red listing of South Africa

The South Africa Tourism Services Association (SATSA) is today calling on the UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, to take immediate steps to remove South Africa from Britain’s travel red list.

In a meeting convened on Monday, 27 September, leading South African scientists presented the latest pandemic data to the UK’s Joint Biosecurity Centre in a virtual meeting.  South African scientists, led by Nicholas Crisp, acting director general of the Department of Health, set out compelling evidence to address the key criteria applied by UK government scientists in advising ministers on designations under the traffic light system.

South African representatives addressed South Africa’s current infection rate, which has now fallen to a fraction of that seen in the UK and that many amber-listed European countries.  They also discussed the Beta variant, which has not been seen in the data in South Africa since early August, having been eradicated by the more transmissible Delta variant.  They also provided information on South Africa’s genomic sequencing capability, which ranks 23rd in the world for the number of genomes sequenced and published.  This puts South Africa above Portugal, South Korea, Greece, Russia and China.  In the last 90 days South Africa sequenced 5,215 genomes which were uploaded onto global databases. In the same time frame Egypt, which was removed from the UK red list ten days ago– uploaded just 5. Oman, which was also removed from the UK red list, uploaded just 90 sequences. 

David Frost, CEO of SATSA, said:

“The hastily-convened meeting between UK and South African scientists this week has merely confirmed what every South African has known for a month – that there isn’t a shred of scientific evidence to support the UK’s continued travel ban.

“The UK is now proposing to take a further 10 days to deliberate on the information, meanwhile jobs will be lost and businesses destroyed.  If the data supports our removal from the travel red list, the UK has a moral obligation to act now before we lose another summer season.”

Lord Hain, former Labour cabinet minister and renowned anti-apartheid campaigner, said:

“Boris Johnson cannot have assessed the detail. His continued red-listing of South Africa is ludicrous and contradicts the science.  South Africa has a low infection rate: just a tenth of the infections in the UK and a similarly low fraction compared with much of Europe.  It has only one variant in circulation, exactly the same variant as in the UK: Delta.  Its third wave peaked in July and it is about to enter the summer peak tourist season with British tourists – the biggest group of visitors – desperate to enjoy the country’s unbeatable visitor opportunities.  Why does just about everyone else in Europe, like Germany, France, and Holland, allow visits to and from South Africa and Britain does not?  Tell us why Boris Johnson?  It makes no sense whatsoever.”

Upcoming Articles

Media Downloads

Share Article

Get daily news updates to your inbox!

Subscribe to receives daily updates!

Trending now

Green Light Ahead? Inside South Africa’s Passport Reforms

The road to visa-free travel is being rebuilt – starting with smarter systems and[...]

Uncharted Waters: The New Cruise Destinations You’ve Probably Never Considered

Cruising has long ignited dreams of far-flung horizons and once-in-a-lifetime journeys for adventurous South[...]

The Future of Incentive Travel: Why Purpose Beats Perks in 2025

JOHANNESBURG – Incentive travel is making a strong comeback in South Africa – just[...]

ATTA® Appoints Taqi Moledina to Board Amid Record Growth in African Tourism

LONDON, 7 October 2025 – The African Travel & Tourism Association (ATTA®), the leading[...]