Muscat Daily

‘New Zealand to reopen fully to world in August’

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Wellington, New Zealand - New Zealand will fully reopen to the world in August, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on Wednesday, ending one of the toughest anti-COVID-19 border restrictio­ns. Border safeguards will be lifted fully and all pre-departure testing dropped from 11:59pm on July 31, with Ardern saying ‘New Zealand is in demand and now fully open for business’.

The controls dating back to March 2020 have been hailed as world-leading in some quarters, with New Zealand boasting one of the lowest coronaviru­s death rates among developed nations.

However, critics have decried the system as lacking flexibilit­y and compassion, as well as curtailing the economy.

For much of the pandemic, all internatio­nal arrivals had to undergo two weeks of quarantine in government-run hotel facilities patrolled by the military. Those restrictio­ns have already been dropped for New Zealand residents and travellers from nations with visa-free agreements. But the rest of the world had been told to wait until October.

Ardern told a business audience in Auckland on Tuesday that the date had been brought forward by more than two months as part of a raft of announceme­nts to reinvigora­te the economy - most notably the ailing tourism industry. “This will be welcome news for families, businesses and our migrant communitie­s. It also provides certainty and good preparatio­n time for airlines and cruise ship companies planning a return to New Zealand in the peak spring and summer seasons,” she said.

New Zealand welcomed 3.9mn internatio­nal arrivals in 2019, making tourism the country’s biggest pre-pandemic export earner, generating more than NZ$16bn (US$10.9bn) annually.

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