Saudi Arabia signs agreement with IATA to establish regional headquarters

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia on Tuesday banned expatriates from traveling to the Kingdom from 20 nations to curb the spread of the coronavirus.
Exceptions to the ban, which begins at 9 p.m. on Wednesday, are diplomats, and medical staff, and their households.

Travel will be banned from the UAE, Egypt, Lebanon, and Turkey, as well as the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Ireland, Portugal, Switzerland, Sweden, Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Japan.

The ban also applies to travelers who transited through any of the 20 nations within the 14 days before a planned visit to the Kingdom. Many passengers had been using Dubai as a transit hub from nations place there are no direct flights to Saudi Arabia, a possibility that’s now not available.
The new action comes amid a world surge in cases of COVID-19 linked to variations within the original coronavirus, first detected in England, South Africa, and Brazil, and fears that vaccines being rolled out worldwide may be less effective against them.

Britain started door-to-door testing of 80,000 individuals on Tuesday in an effort to stem the spread of the extremely infectious South African variant, and there has been an increased spread of the English variant in Sweden.
Health officers within the Kingdom warned this week that stricter measures would be necessary to curb the spread of the virus if the public continued to flout regulations on social distancing and a ban on large gatherings. Saudi Arabia reported 310 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, almost 4 times the number a month ago.

Flights to and from the Kingdom were first suspended on March 14, 2020, two weeks after the World Health Organization declared that the coronavirus outbreak was a pandemic. Entry to Saudi Arabia by air, land, and sea resumed on Jan. 3.

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