Long queues formed at Dover and a major incident was declared as a second day of travel chaos consumed the key port amid additional post-Brexit checks.
The disruption came as most schools in England and Wales broke up for the summer holidays, marking the start of one of the busiest periods for foreign travel.
Passengers faced hours-long queues and were warned to expect another “very busy day” at Dover.
Kent officials said it was a big incident due to the traffic as P&O Ferries told travellers to allow at least three to four hours to pass through security and French border checks.
Housing in Ireland is among the most expensive and most affordable in the EU. How does that happen?
Ceann comhairle election key task as 34th Dáil convenes for first time
Your EV questions answered: Am I better to drive my 13-year-old diesel until it dies than buy a new EV?
Workplace wrangles: Staying on the right side of your HR department, and more labrynthine aspects of employment law
About 10,000 cars are predicted to travel through the port on Saturday – 1,500 more than on Friday. About 3,000 lorries are also reportedly waiting to cross the Channel.
Doug Bannister, the port’s chief executive, said there could be delays of five to six hours. “We were expecting that today was going to be a busier day than yesterday,” he told the BBC’s Today programme on Saturday.
“We are operating in a post-Brexit environment which does mean that passports need to be checked, they need to be stamped and indeed the capable people that do man the booths – Police aux Frontieres – they’re doing their job that they need to do now.”
French politician Pierre-Henri Dumont, the republican MP for Calais, blamed the UK’s exit from the EU for the chaos, telling BBC News it was “an aftermath of Brexit” with more checks needed.
UK foreign secretary, Liz Truss, said France was to blame for “entirely avoidable” delays, calling on officials there to “build up capacity at the border to limit any further disruption for British tourists and to ensure this appalling situation is avoided in future”.
But Mr Dumont said there was “no need to blame French authorities for the traffic jams in Dover”. “We have to run more and longer checks,” he tweeted.
Mr Dumont also accused London of having “rejected [a] few months ago a proposal to double the number of passport booths” for French police in Dover.
Post-Brexit travel rules mean British nationals may stay in the Schengen zone for no more than 90 days in any 180-day period. Until a fully automated border system is operational, passport stamps are now required at most entry and exit points, significantly increasing processing times.
The British foreign office is advising travellers to mainland Europe to get their passports stamped, noting that if “relevant entry or exit stamps are not in your passport, a border officer may presume you have overstayed your visa-free limit”.
In December 2020, the UK cabinet office reportedly rejected a €38 million proposal to double the capacity for French government passport checks at Dover after the port requested funding to help it to pay for additional Brexit-related border expenses.
The funding would have been used to double the number of French border police passport booths in anticipation of more stringent requirements – including stamps in passports from January 1st, 2021 — the Financial Times reported.
ITV News reported on Wednesday that the Port of Dover was only then “expanding border capacity to avoid queues” after a deal with the French border force to operate 50 per cent more passport control booths.
The port said the extra booths would be “installed before the summer getaway weekend” of July 22nd-24th, but conceded their operation would depend on French “resourcing levels, and we know resourcing around Europe . . . is tight”.
A regional government official for Nord-Pas-de-Calais said in a statement on Friday evening that French officials had “of course anticipated the increased traffic levels” and put in place “an appropriate level of staffing”.
He said a “technical incident” at the Channel tunnel had meant French border police had not been at full operating capacity in Dover until 8.45am on Friday, an hour later than planned, by which time long delays had built up.
UK authorities have rejected this explanation.
The transport secretary, Grant Shapps, said he was “working closely” with the French transport minister “to minimise further disruption so people can get away quickly”.
But Labour’s Nick Thomas-Symonds accused the government of being “absent”, telling Times Radio that those in charge need to be “taking a grip of this situation”. — Guardian