Norge har tilsvarende Candas tiltak vedr testing ved ankomst. (Red.)
|
|
IATA blasts Canada’s new testing
rule for inbound air passengers
Airlines trade group IATA has blasted the government
of Canada after it imposed new travel restrictions on inbound air passengers
beginning later this week.
The
organisation on 3 January voiced its “deep frustration” at the country’s plans
to introduce an additional coronavirus testing burden on arriving travellers,
calling the new rules “callous and impractical”. The requirement is to take
effect on 7 January,
IATA
also criticises the government for a stipulation making airlines responsible for
ensuring passengers’ compliance with the regulation, saying “it cannot be the
airline’s role to determine if a passenger tried their utmost to get tested or
not”.
“Canada
already has one the world’s most draconian Covid-19 border-control regimes,
including travel bans and quarantines,” IATA says. Adding the testing
requirement is “the worst of both worlds”.
“While
the industry for months has been calling for systematic testing to reopen
borders without quarantine measures, these pleas have fallen on deaf ears,
especially in Canada,” the association adds.
Canadian government officials said on 30 December that
beginning in early January, all arriving passengers would be required to present
a negative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test result that is less than 72h
old. That’s in addition to the mandatory 14-day quarantine for all inbound
passengers which has been in effect since March.
Unlike
in other countries, where passengers arriving with proof of a negative
coronavirus test are permitted to bypass quarantines, Canada’s new rule requires
passengers isolation even if they test negative.
Travellers to Canada who are found disregarding the
quarantine can be subject to up to six months in jail or a fine of C$750,000
($587,000).
It is
unclear if the new rule also applies to international passengers arriving in the
western Canadian province of Alberta, which last week permitted an opt-out
option with proof of a negative test result, reducing the quarantine time to two
days rather than the federally mandated two weeks.
IATA
cites the economic damage which has resulted from Canada’s strict measures,
which were imposed last March when the highly-contagious virus began to rapidly
spread around the globe. Hundreds of thousands of jobs as well as billions of
tourism dollars have been lost since then, IATA says.
“Less
measurable, but equally tragic is the impact that these tunnel-vision policies
to close Canada off from the world are having on individuals separated from
families or those struggling to cope with unemployment,” IATA says. “Public
health is the top priority. The efforts to contain Covid-19 must take full
account of the detrimental impacts that closing borders and discouraging travel
is having on the mental well-being of Canadians.”
The
longest peaceful border in the world, between the United States and its
northerly neighbour, has been closed to non-essential travel since 21 March. Its
opening has been delayed numerous times, and is now scheduled for 21
January.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.