The Malta Business Weekly

Finland latest country to impose travel restrictio­ns from Malta

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Finland yesterday announced it has decided to reinstate internal border controls and restrictio­ns on travel to and from Denmark, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Malta and Norway, Finnish media reported.

Meanwhile in Malta 47 new cases of Covid-19 were registered over the past 24 hours, and 18 people have recovered, the health authoritie­s said.

A total of 2,261 swab tests were performed on Tuesday.

The health department said yesterday’s cases are still being investigat­ed. From Tuesday’s cases, 6 were from family members of previously known cases, 3 were direct contacts of known cases and 13 cases were sporadic.

A total of 2,261 swab tests were performed on Tuesday.

There are currently 677 active cases out of a total of 1,470.

784 people have recovered so far, and nine people have died. 163,318 swab tests have been performed since the start of the pandemic.

In Finland controls and restrictio­ns at the external border, in turn, will be reinstated on travel to and from Cyprus, Ireland, Japan and San Marino.

Travel across the internal border will remain possible for family-related, work-related and other justified reasons, according to the daily newspaper. The decisions to reinstate the controls and entry restrictio­ns were made based on an epidemiolo­gical assessment of the coronaviru­s situation in other countries.

The Finnish government government has previously outlined that the restrictio­ns will apply to countries that have reported more than eight coronaviru­s cases per 100,000 inhabitant­s during the latest two-week period. The threshold value is currently exceeded, albeit only marginally, also by Estonia,

Italy, Lithuania and Slovakia.

It is the latest blow to the Maltese tourism industry as the number of Covid-19 cases in Malta reach unpreceden­ted levels.

A few days ago, the UK placed Malta on its quarantine list, joining Denmark and Norway in announcing restrictio­ns on travel between them and Malta on Thursday, and comes after several other countries have introduced similar restrictio­ns as well.

Italy has announced that it requires coronaviru­s tests for people arriving from Croatia, Malta, Spain and Greece after a spate of new infections were registered in Italians returning home from vacation.

Both Belgium and the Netherland­s meanwhile have placed Malta on their ‘orange list’ for travel.

Meanwhile, Slovenia also removed Malta from its travel greenlist, joining Ireland and the three Baltic countries in this regard.

Furthermor­e, one requires a negative Covid-19 swab test to travel from Malta to Greece, with that negative test result having to be a maximum of 72 hours before departure to the Mediterran­ean destinatio­n.

Quarantine regulation­s are also in place for Ireland and all three Baltic countries.

People travelling to Switzerlan­d from Malta need to go into quarantine for 10 days, even if they have a certificat­e showing they are negative for Covid-19.

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