Spain will only allow travelers from the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland with a vaccination certificate, but not with negative Covit-19 tests or evidence to rule out the disease after December 1.
It is a general rule of the Ministry of the Interior that changes the criteria for applying the temporary ban on non-essential travel from third countries to the EU and Schengen countries for public order and public health reasons. For the health crisis, this was published in the Official State Bulletin (BOE) this Saturday.
The resolution removes Namibia from the list of Third Countries, Special Administrative Areas and other regional bodies and authorities, saying “this is one of the countries where member states consider it appropriate to increase precautionary measures.”
The list of countries not affected by these restrictions includes Argentina, Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Indonesia, Jordan, Kuwait, New Zealand, Peru, Qatar, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, UAE, Uruguay and China. As well as parts of Hong Kong and Macau and Taiwan.
The Department, led by Fernando Grande-Marlaska, argues that “the emergence of new types of causative agents is necessary at this time to increase travel restrictions”, which suppresses negative diagnostic tests or recovery tests as appropriate documentation. Access to Spain for people from the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland.
In this way, “Spain may refuse to allow travelers from these countries who do not have a vaccine certificate approved by the Ministry of Health for this purpose, after verification by health officials, as well as to accompanying minors. Extends health effects.”
The Home Ministry’s general rule, which has been amended several times since it came into force in July last year, is a list of third countries that will be “effective” from today until 24:00 pm on December 31, 2021, excluding Namibia.
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