Deutsche Welle (English edition)

COVID: Australia and New Zealand return to quarantine-free travel

For the first time in over a year, people can travel to New Zealand from Australia without having to contend with a strict quarantine. The countries' leaders hope to expand the arrangemen­t.

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Australian passengers headed to New Zealand on Monday without the need to quarantine for the first time in over a year, agencies reported.

The "trans- Tasman travel bubble" allows Australian­s and New Zealanders to visit each others' country without any restrictio­ns. The two nations' government­s imposed heavy restrictio­ns on entry into their respective country in March 2020 due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

"It is truly exciting to start quarantine-free travel with Australia. Be it returning family, friends or holidaymak­ers, New Zealand says welcome and enjoy yourself," New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said.

Plans to expand

Although people arriving from New Zealand have been able to travel to parts of Australia without quarantine since October, Monday was the first time that people could travel, or return, to New Zealand without going into a two-week controlled isolation.

The first flight under the new arrangemen­t took off on Monday morning from Sydney, heading for Auckland.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison called the travel bubble a "win-win" for both countries, allowing them to boost their economies. Ardern and Morrison described it as a "world-leading arrangemen­t" in a joint statement.

The duo are looking to include further countries in the Pacific in the quarantine-free travel bubble, once they are considered safe.

Travelers welcome Pacific bubble

The new possibilit­ies for travel proved popular with hundreds of people gathering in Australian airports in preparatio­n for their newly unrestrict­ed flights to New Zealand, local television showed.

"It is the first time in 400 days that people can travel quarantine-free and we are adding 16 return flights a day to New Zealand, and they are full," Qantas Chief Executive Alan Joyce told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

New Zealand had held off longer from offering unrestrict­ed entry to people flying from Australia due to sporadic outbreaks. New Zealand has recorded fewer than 3,000 cases since the pandemic began.

The two prime ministers warned travelers that changes to the arrangemen­t could be made at short notice in case of new COVID-19 outbreaks and the program would be under "constant review."

 ??  ?? The two Pacific countries have kicked off a 'trans-Tasman travel bubble'
The two Pacific countries have kicked off a 'trans-Tasman travel bubble'

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