A family leave to board a plane at Sydney’s International Airport on November 1, 2021, as Australia’s international border reopens almost 600 days after a pandemic closure began. — AFP pic
SYDNEY, Feb 7 — Australia will reopen its borders to fully vaccinated tourists from February 21, Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced Monday, ending some of the world’s strictest and longest-running pandemic travel restrictions.
“It’s almost two years since we took the decision to close the borders to Australia,” Morrison said after a meeting of the national security cabinet.
“If you’re double vaccinated, we look forward to welcoming you back to Australia.”
Australia’s borders slammed shut in March 2020 to protect the island continent against a surging pandemic.
For most of the time since then, Australians have been barred from leaving and only a handful of visitors have been granted exemptions to enter.
The rules have split families, hammered the country’s large tourist industry and prompted sometimes acrimonious debates about Australia’s status as a modern, open and outward-looking nation.
Little-by-little rules have been relaxed for Australians, long-term residents and students.
The latest decision will see almost all remaining caps lifted.
It comes after the country’s long-standing “Covid-zero” policy was abandoned and the once stellar track-and-trace system collapsed under a wave of Omicron cases. — AFP