US to drop Covid testing for incoming air travellers
Agencies | Washington
The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com
The United States will drop from tomorrow a 17-month-old requirement that people arriving in the country by air test negative for COVID-19, an official said, a move that follows intense lobbying by the airlines and the travel industry.
A formal announcement will be made later on Friday. The step comes as the busy summer travel season is kicking off and air carriers were already preparing for record demand. Airlines have said many Americans are not travelling internationally because of concerns they will test positive and be stranded abroad.
The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has determined that the science and data show the pre-departure COVID tests are no longer necessary, said the official, who declined to be named.
The measure will come into effect at 12:01 a.m. on Sunday and the CDC will reassess the decision in 90 days, the official said. The United States has required incoming international air travellers to provide pre-departure negative tests since January 2021.
In December the CDC tightened the rules to require travellers to test negative within one day before flights to the United States rather than three days. The CDC has not required testing for land border crossings.
The official said, “If there is a need to reinstate a pre-departure testing requirement -- including due to a new, concerning variant -- CDC will not hesitate to act.” Many countries in Europe and elsewhere have already dropped testing requirements.
The CDC is still requiring most non-U.S. citizens to be vaccinated against COVID to travel to the United States. IATA, the world’s biggest airline trade group, welcomed what it called “great news” that the administration is “removing the ineffective pre-departure COVID test for travel to the US.”
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