Min menu

Pages

The young Romanians, wearing face masks and gloves, filed out of the near empty airport in groups of five to comply with social distancing rules

First plane carrying 150 'critically important' Romanian fruit and veg pickers joining 'land army' battling to avoid wasting the UK's harvest lands at Stansted
The Romanians, a mixture of men and girls, landed at Stansted this afternoon
They were then transported by buses to a 7,000 hectare farm in geographic region
Food firm G's Fresh paid around £40,000 for the Titan Airways AirBus 320 flight
It comes amid concerns food will rot in fields unless 80,000 workers are found
Learn more about a way to help people impacted by COVID
The first plane carrying 150 'critically important' Romanian fruit and vegetable pickers landed at Stansted this afternoon.

The young Romanians, a mixture of men and girls and every one wearing face masks and gloves, filed out of the near empty airport in groups of 5 to suits social distancing rules.

They were then transported by buses to a 7,000 hectare super farm in geographic region before the beginning of the picking season on Monday.

The Romanians are joining the fight to avoid wasting the UK's harvest with British 'land army', which was created to stop crops being left rotting in fields.

The Country Land & Business Association has said quite 30,000 people have signed up as volunteers, but that 80,000 workers are needed to confirm fruit and vegetables are picked on time, able to feed the state.

Workers from Romania reach Stansted airport in Essex this afternoon to be greeted by masked armed police and masked officials before boarding coaches to an outsized farm in geographic region

Fruit pickers from Romania practice a deserted Stansted airport this afternoon

Young Romanian workers exit of Stansted and find able to be taken to a farm in geographic region

A fruit picker wearing gloves and a mask sits on the coach this afternoon ready for it to travel to a farm in geographic region


The plane carrying farm workers lands at Stansted this afternoon. The fruit and veg pickers will then be heading to a farm in geographic region

In recent years, British farms have come to depend upon a military of 90,000 fruit and vegetable pickers from Eastern Europe to gather the summer harvest.

But this year with most European countries are in lockdown thanks to the coronavirus pandemic.

Travel has been hugely restricted and there are real fears crops could move to waste in fields.

In other developments because the country struggles under the coronavirus strain:

the united kingdom has announced 861 more deaths from coronavirus, taking the overall number of victims to 13,729;
A poll for MailOnline has suggested the general public isn't ready for the lockdown to finish, with 80 per cent said they'd not have felt safe returning to normal life at the moment;
A report sent to ministers has suggested coffee shops, restaurants and estate agents should be among the primary to reopen on Britain's high streets, as they're the companies possibly to spice up the economy and pose the littlest risk of spreading the virus;
There are claims that the population can be 'segmented' to ease restrictions with teens allowed to travel back to figure and first schools opened, while pensioners and also the vulnerable are ordered to remain in isolation;
One of the government's own key experts, Professor Neil Ferguson, has warned curbs can not be eased until mass testing is in situ and criticised the government's slow action;
World Health Organisation director for Europe, Dr Hans Kluge, said the united kingdom, together with Russia and Belarus, is one in every of the explanations the continent is 'still within the eye of the storm' of the coronavirus crisis;
The first newly-adapted ventilator design has been approved by regulators, with the govt. ordering 15,000 of the Penlon's Prima ES202 model;
Matt Hancock has rejected imply ministers to require a cut in solidarity with hard-hit workers, after counterparts in New Zealand announced they would;
Mr Hancock insisted the govt. could hit its 100,000 on a daily basis testing target by the tip of the month, despite questions over why it's still not using the present capacity of 25,000.
Reactions

Comments