China lifted mandatory quarantine for tourism after three years

China lifted mandatory quarantine for tourism after three years

Since then, the Asian giant once again registered a new epidemiological outbreak that, given its scale, generates global concern. Today, the first travelers showed their relief at not having to carry out those mandatory quarantines.

Since March 2020, people entering China have been required to self-isolate at government facilities, initially for three weeks, which was reduced to five days in November last year.

After the announcement of the lifting of this measure, the Chinese rushed to buy trips abroad.

At Shanghai Pudong International Airport, one of the cities hardest hit by the new coronavirus outbreak, a woman said she was very excited about the change, the AFP news agency reported.

However, many countries began to impose the mandatory Covid-19 test for travelers from China in view of a rebound in visitors and the new epidemiological outbreak.

About, China said the restrictions imposed by the United States, Japan or European Union (EU) countries are “unacceptable”, but at the same time it requires Covid tests on incoming passengers and continues to largely block international tourists and students.

chinacovid.jpg

Meanwhile, at Beijing airport, the barriers that used to separate international and domestic arrivals were removed, as were medical personnel in white protective suits.

In the lobby, a woman was waiting for a friend who is studying in Hong Kong. “It’s so fantastic, we haven’t seen each other in so long (…) A year ago,” Wu, 20, told the French agency.

In the semi-autonomous city of Hong Kong, in southern China, measures were also relaxed at the border, almost closed since 2020.

The battered economy of this business hub needs to reconnect with its main source of growth, and many families separated on both sides of the border yearn to reunite for the Lunar New Year.

Some 410,000 Hong Kong residents plan to travel north in the next two months. And some 7,000 people from the continent were going to move south today, according to official data.

In the midst of the largest outbreak of coronavirus since the lifting of the “Covid Zero” strategy, the health situation is expected to be complicated ahead of the Chinese New Year celebration, which will take place at the end of the month and will cause millions of trips from urban residents to rural areas. to visit often elderly relatives.

Source: Ambito

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts