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France to welcome vaccinated travellers restricts others

Paris – France Prime Minister Jean Castex said on Saturday to reimpose restrictions on unvaccinated travellers from a series of countries to counter a rebound in COVID-19 infections while opening its doors to those who are fully vaccinated.

From Sunday, July 18, non-vaccinated people coming from the United Kingdom, Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, the Netherlands and Greece will need to present a COVID-19 test dating from less than 24 hours before travel to enter France.

Currently, tests can date from 48 hours for UK travellers and 72 hours for the other countries listed.

Castex’s announcement follows Britain’s decision on Friday to keep quarantine rules for travellers from France, which had been due to be eased on Monday. 

Fully vaccinated travellers from any country of departure will be able to enter France without a test from Saturday, Castex stated in a statement.

“Because the vaccines are effective against the virus, and in particular its variant Delta, the constraints weighing on travellers benefiting from a complete vaccination schedule with a vaccine recognised by the European Medicines Agency (Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca or Janssen) will be raised from this Saturday, July 17, regardless of the country of origin,” he stated.

People travelling from Tunisia, Mozambique, Cuba and Indonesia will in addition need to justify their travel, show they have tested negative for COVID-19 before departure and then quarantine for 10 days after arriving. They join a “red list” of countries for which similar rules are already in place.