More Countries impose travel restrictions on China as Covid-19 cases surge

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More Countries are imposing restrictions on arrivals from China, where coronavirus cases have increased. The United Kingdom, France, Spain, and Italy are requiring visitors from China to provide a negative COVID-19 test result before boarding flights.

Because of the severity of the outbreak in China and concerns about official data, the United States, India, Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan have imposed their own new travel restrictions on Chinese visitors.

Malaysia, Australia, and the Philippines are among the other countries that have imposed such restrictions.

Reports confirmed that France said the tests will have to be done less than 48 hours  before departure and will be required on direct flights from China and flights with stopovers, with random tests carried out on passengers on arrival.

Positive tests will be sequenced to check for new variants, the government said.

The UK said it will  require travellers leaving China for Britain to also provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test before boarding.

On Friday, December 30, 2022, Spain’s government announced new COVID-19  regulations for passengers arriving at the country’s airports from China.

Such travellers will be required to test negative for COVID-19 or prove they have been fully vaccinated against the disease.

Spanish health minister Carolina Darias told a news conference that Spain would coordinate at a high level with other EU member states to adopt a common policy while pushing for a revision of the current conditions that need to be met by travellers seeking to obtain the EU’s so-called Digital COVID Certificate.

The new measure comes after the European Union’s Health Security Committee met on Thursday to discuss the bloc’s strategy for mitigating the spread of the virus amid an influx of visitors from China after Beijing lifted most of its travel restrictions.

Italy, which had already mandated tests on arrival for all travellers by air from China, called for such measures to be extended across the EU, warning they risked being ineffective if applied in a piecemeal fashion by only some countries within the bloc.

But the EU health committee, which is composed of officials from health ministries across the bloc and chaired by the European Commission, said it believed an EU-wide introduction of mandatory COVID-19 screenings for travellers from China was currently “unjustified”.

On its part, Germany said it was seeking a coordinated system to monitor variants across European airports.