Under the plan, the bloc would accept visitors who have completed their immunization at least two weeks before their arrival, using vaccines from AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech and Sinopharm
Passengers arrive at Faro airport in Algarve, south of Portugal, on May 17, 2021. - British holidaymakers arrived in Portugal as the country hopes to revive its battered tourism industry after lifting travel restrictions that had been imposed to curb Covid-19. Britons are the biggest contingent of tourists in Portugal, a country whose economy relies heavily on foreign visitors.
Image: PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP
BRUSSELS — The European Union agreed Wednesday to reopen its borders to visitors who have been fully vaccinated with an approved shot and to those coming from a list of countries considered safe from a coronavirus perspective, permitting broader travel just in time for the summer tourism season.
Ambassadors from the 27 EU member states endorsed a plan that would allow visits from tourists and other nonessential travelers, who have been mostly barred from entering the bloc for more than a year.
The move has been seen as an economic imperative for tourism-dependent countries such as Greece and Spain, and it has been months in the works. Other EU nations that are less reliant on tourists for jobs and income, particularly in northern Europe, had been eager to maintain higher barriers for nonessential visitors to keep the coronavirus at bay. But they relented as vaccinations advanced and after they were promised the ability to reverse course if cases surge again.
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