Gulf News

EU opens borders for 14 nations, US out

BLOC RELEASES ‘SAFE LIST’, ALLOWS CHINESE TRAVELLERS BUT ONLY BASED ON RECIPROCIT­Y

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The European Union has excluded the United States from its initial “safe list” of countries from which the bloc will allow non-essential travel from today.

The 27-member bloc gave approval yesterday to leisure or business travel from 14 countries beyond its borders, the Council of the EU, which represents EU government­s, said in a statement.

The countries are Algeria, Australia, Canada, Georgia, Japan, Montenegro, Morocco, New Zealand, Rwanda, Serbia, South Korea, Thailand, Tunisia and Uruguay.

China has also been provisiona­lly approved, although travel would only open up if Chinese authoritie­s also allowed in EU visitors. Reciprocit­y is a condition of being on the list.

Russia, Brazil and Turkey, along with the United States, are among countries whose containmen­t of the virus is considered worse than that of the EU average and so will have to wait at least two weeks. The bloc will carry out fortnightl­y reviews.

The move is aimed at supporting the EU travel industry and tourist destinatio­ns, particular­ly countries in southern Europe hardest hit by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Restricted access

The list needed a “qualified majority” of EU countries to be passed, meaning 15 EU countries representi­ng 65 per cent of the population.

It acts as a recommenda­tion to EU members, meaning they could potentiall­y set restrictio­ns on those entering from the 14 nations and will almost certainly not allow access to travellers from other countries.

The EU’s efforts to reopen internal borders, particular­ly among the 26-nation Schengen area which normally has no frontier checks, have been patchy as various countries have restricted access for certain visitors.

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