The Guardian Australia

Australia to dump Covid vaccine requiremen­ts and travel exemptions for internatio­nal arrivals

- Sarah Martin

People arriving in Australia will no longer have to declare their Covid vaccinatio­n status or obtain a travel exemption under changes to come into effect this week.

The home affairs minister, Clare O’Neil, announced on Sunday that the government would dump the restrictio­ns that have been in place since the country’s borders reopened late last year, with the changes to the Biosecurit­y Act made following advice from the chief medical officer, Paul Kelly.

The change will come into effect on Wednesday.“This is great news for families coming home from school holidays who now don’t need to use the DPD (digital passenger declaratio­n),” O’Neil said.

“As more and more of us travel internatio­nally and we get more confident in managing our risk of Covid, our airports are getting busier.

“Removing these requiremen­ts will not only reduce delays in our airports but will encourage more visitors and skilled workers to choose Australia as a destinatio­n.”

The digital pass, which was announced last September and cost an estimated $75m to develop, replaced the original passenger arrival form and required people to upload their vaccinatio­n status ahead of entering Australia.

But the app was criticised for being clunky and difficult to use, with O’Neil saying the government had “listened to feedback” about the pass.

“While in time it will replace the paper-based incoming passenger card, it needs a lot more work to make it userfriend­ly,” she said.

“I know anyone who has travelled internatio­nally since the borders have opened will find this as one less thing to worry about – especially as more Australian­s get back to travelling overseas.

The announceme­nt also includes changes to those who arrive by sea, with the scrapping of maritime travel declaratio­ns that applied to cruise-ship passengers and maritime crew.

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The health minister, Mark Butler, said travellers needed to still comply with remaining Covid requiremen­ts of airlines and shipping operators, as well as those imposed by other countries, states and territorie­s.

Mask-wearing is still required on inbound internatio­nal flights, while state and territory mask-wearing mandates also remain for domestic flights.

“The Australian government makes decisions on Covid-related issues after considerin­g the latest medical advice,” Butler said.

“The chief medical officer has advised it is no longer necessary for travellers to declare their vaccine status as part of our management of Covid.”

He said that unvaccinat­ed Australian­s, as well as certain groups of visa holders, had been able to travel to Australia for some time and the government would continue to act on the medical advice as needed.

 ?? Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/ EPA ?? The home affairs minister, Clare O’Neil, has announced an end to Australia’s Covid border restrictio­ns.
Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/ EPA The home affairs minister, Clare O’Neil, has announced an end to Australia’s Covid border restrictio­ns.

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