Global Times

Academic exchange, travel to Australia impacted by outbreak

- By Xu Keyue Page Editor: lengshumei@globaltime­s.com.cn

Academic exchange and travel between China and Australia has been hit hard by the COVID-19 outbreak as students planning to go to Australia are facing up to stringent travel bans.

Travel agencies have canceled tours to Australia as Canberra on February 1 announced a ban on people arriving from or transiting through the Chinese mainland from entering Australia.

A customer service operator for Chinese online travel agency Ctrip.com told the Global Times on Sunday that no package tours to Australia can be booked before May 31.

Many students stuck in China over Spring Festival have opted for a third country to enter Australia. A Master’s student surnamed Yu at the University of New South Wales told the Global Times she planned to fly to Thailand on Wednesday and stay there for two weeks. Yu said her university was supporting students, for example by subsidizin­g their stay at a third country for quarantine or allowing them to defer admissions if they could not return on schedule.

An estimated 100,000 Chinese students enrolled at Australian schools are reportedly held up by the travel ban and stuck either on the Chinese mainland or at a third country.

Australian media reported Saturday the country would ease travel restrictio­ns on Chinese high school students outside the epicenter Hubei Province, but university students reached by the Global Times said they were still prevented from enrollment.

None of the Chinese visiting scholars with offers from Australian universiti­es reached by the Global Times as of Sunday have been granted visas since the virus outbreak.

“The visa process for visiting scholars seems stopped,” said a scholar at the University of Melbourne who only offered the surname Shen.

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