World News

Australia reopens its borders to international travellers

Australia has reopened its border to foreign tourists for the very first time in over two years, after closing due to the Covid-19 outbreak in March 2020. More than 50 different flights are scheduled to arrive today.

Fully vaccinated travellers can enter all states without undergoing a quarantine period except Western Australia, which is sealed till March 3 and will require a booster dose. An up to 14-day quarantine at a hotel is required for unvaccinated travellers.

Australians and a few others have been allowed to come back since late 2021, but most tourists had to wait.

With some of the world’s strictest Covid-19 regulations, Australia was criticised for isolating families and interfering with businesses, but they’re also praised for preventing coronavirus-related deaths before the launch of the vaccination campaign.

In 2019, Australia received around 9.5 million international tourists. The Minister for Trade, Tourism, and Investment expressed optimism for a substantial recovery in the tourism sector.

“What wonderful, wonderful news for our tourism industry and the 660,000 people employed in it”.

SOURCE: BBC

Pete

Pete is a writer for The Thaiger, and he writes various topics from news, travel and property. His main focus is writing about Thai news, and what is happening in Thailand.