• Japan to reopen to foreign tourists after two-year pandemic closure | Japan | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/27/japan-to-reopen-to-foreign-tourists-after-two-year-pandemic-closure
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/888cb8f738988e79f918af974dab020b5fa2069d/506_78_5248_3149/master/5248.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Japan to reopen to foreign tourists after two-year pandemic closure
    Government to allow in tourists from 98 countries and regions next month – but only as part of tour groups
    Agence France-Presse
    Fri 27 May 2022 04.20 BST
    Japan has announced it will end a two-year pandemic closure and reopen to tourists from 98 countries and regions next month, but travellers will only be allowed in as part of tour groups.The decision comes after the government last week said it would test allowing small group tours with visitors from the US, Australia, Thailand and Singapore from this month.
    On Thursday, the government revised border controls to resume accepting package tours from the 98 countries and regions – including Britain, the US, France, Spain, Canada and Malaysia – starting on 10 June.Japan will also expand the number of airports that accept international flights to seven, adding Naha in its southern Okinawa prefecture and New Chitose near Sapporo in northern Hokkaido.
    Japanese tourists at the entrance to Kiyomizu-dera temple in Kyoto
    Covid robbed Kyoto of foreign tourists – now it is not sure it wants them back. For most of the pandemic Japan has barred all tourists and allowed only citizens and foreign residents entry, though even the latter have periodically been shut out.All arrivals have to test negative to Covid before travel to Japan and many must be tested again on arrival, though triple-vaccinated people coming from certain countries can skip the additional test as well as a three-day quarantine required for others.Tour groups are expected to take responsibility for ensuring visitors respect Japan’s near-universal mask-wearing and other measures that have helped keep the toll from Covid comparatively low.Just how many people will be able to take advantage of the careful reopening is unclear as Japan is planning to double a daily entry cap, but only to 20,000.The prime minister, Fumio Kishida, has said he wants to ease border control measures, but moves are expected to proceed slowly, with strong public support for the current restrictions.Japan welcomed a record 31.9 million foreign visitors in 2019 and had been on track to achieve its goal of 40 million in 2020 before the pandemic hit.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#japon#sante#pandemie#tourisme#frontiere#economie#circulation

  • Priti Patel’s Rwanda plan for UK asylum seekers faces its first legal challenge

    Home secretary is violating international law, the UN refugee convention and data protection rules, say lawyers

    The first legal action has been launched against Priti Patel’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda as the UN’s refugee agency raised concerns that the UK is “inviting” other European countries to adopt the same divisive immigration policy.

    Lodged last Tuesday, the legal challenge states that the home secretary’s proposals run contrary to international law and the UN refugee convention, as well as breaching British data protection law.

    Lawyers believe that the Rwanda plans are a “publicity stunt” to discourage people crossing the Channel in small boats. Patel is refusing to disclose key framework documents explaining which migrants may be eligible to be removed.

    Larry Bottinick, acting UNHCR representative to Britain, told the Observer: “We are worried that they [the British] are inviting all their European counterparts to do the same. I can understand from their perspective why they would do that – it would give such deals more perceived legitimacy if others do the same.” Denmark has already signalled an interest in outsourcing elements of its asylum system to Rwanda.

    Bottinick added that Britain would welcome other countries following suit because it would mean even fewer refugees made it to northern France. He warned: “This would increase the pressures on those states neighbouring conflict areas which are already hosting the great majority of those seeking refuge.”

    The action has been launched by the law firm InstaLaw. The Home Office has three weeks to respond and the process could lead to Patel being challenged in the high court. Stuart Luke, partner at InstaLaw, said their case was based on an Iranian asylum seeker who believes he would face an extremely difficult time if sent to Rwanda. “He could be the only Iranian in the country, there’s no network there, no community, no one who speaks the language. How’s he going to manage, survive? How’s he going to find a job, get educated?” said Luke.

    Initially the Home Office had given assurances that it would not deport him before 10 May – but on Friday the department backed down and said it was not looking to deport him.

    Bottinick said that the UNHCR had “serious concerns” over how the Home Office and Rwanda intended to integrate non-African asylum seekers who formed the vast majority of arrivals in the UK.

    “There will be issues as basic as interpretation for Vietnamese and Albanian speakers. The main arrivals to the UK also include Iranians, Iraqis and Syrians. We have serious concerns about Rwanda’s capacity to integrate these groups.”

    The legal move came as activists accused Patel of “racist” and “inhumane” policies over the Rwanda plan during her appearance at a Conservative party dinner. The home secretary was speaking at a dinner organised by the Bassetlaw Conservatives in Nottinghamshire on Friday when several activists stood on their chairs and denounced her for the policy.

    Footage published on social media shows a woman stand up and tell Patel: “Priti Patel, your racist policies are killing people. Your plans to send people seeking asylum to Rwanda are inhumane and are going to ruin people’s lives.” The woman was booed before being led away. A number of other activists then stood up and made statements.

    A Home Office spokesperson said the agreement with Rwanda would “overhaul our broken asylum system.”

    They added: “It means those arriving dangerously, illegally or unnecessarily can be relocated to have their asylum claims considered and, if recognised as refugees, build their lives there.

    “Our partnership with Rwanda fully complies with international and national law. We will defend any legal challenge robustly.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/07/priti-patels-rwanda-plan-for-uk-asylum-seekers-faces-its-first-legal-ch

    #justice #résistance
    #Angleterre #UK #asile #migrations #réfugiés
    #offshore_asylum_processing #externalisation #Rwanda #procédure_d'asile #pays_tiers

    –---

    Sur cet accord, voir ce fil de discussion :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/957141

    et ajouté à la métaliste sur la mise en place de l’#externalisation des #procédures_d'asile au #Rwanda par l’#Angleterre (2022) :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/900122

    • Rwanda asylum flight cancelled after 11th-hour ECHR intervention

      First flight to Rwanda grounded after lawyers make successful emergency application

      Boris Johnson’s plan to send an inaugural flight of asylum seekers to Rwanda has been abandoned after a dramatic 11th-hour ruling by the European court of human rights.

      Up to seven people who had come to the UK seeking refuge had been expected to be removed to the east African country an hour and a half before the flight was due to take off.

      But a ruling by the ECHR on one of the seven cases allowed lawyers for the other six to make successful last-minute applications.

      The decision is a significant and embarrassing blow for Boris Johnson and his home secretary, Priti Patel, who had promised to start sending thousands of asylum seekers 4,000 miles to the east African country in May.

      It comes hours after the prime minister threatened to take the UK out of the ECHR and accused lawyers of aiding criminals exploiting refugees in the Channel.

      The legality of the Rwanda policy will be tested in a full court hearing next month.

      Responding to the decision, Patel said she was “disappointed” by the legal challenge, made pointed criticisms of the ECHR ruling and said that the policy will continue.

      “We will not be deterred from doing the right thing and delivering our plans to control our nation’s borders,” she said. “Our legal team are reviewing every decision made on this flight and preparation for the next flight begins now.”

      Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said that the government must take responsibility for the failed flight, and indicated that the government does not mind clashing with lawyers and the European courts.

      “Ministers are pursuing a policy they know isn’t workable and that won’t tackle criminal gangs,” she wrote on Twitter last night. “But they still paid Rwanda £120m and hired a jet that hasn’t taken off because they just want a row and someone else to blame.”

      The Rwandan government said on Wednesday it was still committed to taking in asylum seekers sent by the UK. “We are not deterred by these developments. Rwanda remains fully committed to making this partnership work,” government spokeswoman Yolande Makolo told AFP.

      “The current situation of people making dangerous journeys cannot continue as it is causing untold suffering to so many. Rwanda stands ready to receive the migrants when they do arrive and offer them safety and opportunity in our country.”

      The flight, which cost an estimated £500,000, had already been paid for from the public purse, a government source confirmed. The UK government has paid £120m as a downpayment on the Rwanda deal. The government has declined to say how much it has paid in legal costs, and has not said how much it expects to pay for future flights, accommodation and living costs for everyone sent to Rwanda.

      The ECHR examined the case of a 54-year-old Iraqi asylum seeker who crossed the Channel in a boat.

      He claimed asylum in the UK last month citing danger to his life in Iraq. Five days later, he was served with a notice of intent indicating that the Home Office was considering deeming his asylum claim inadmissible and relocating him to Rwanda.

      A doctor at the detention centre issued a report saying that he may have been a victim of torture, it is understood. He was then served with removal directions to Rwanda for 14 June 2022. A letter from the court said that the asylum seeker should not be removed on Tuesday evening.

      The ECHR said it took particular account of evidence that asylum seekers transferred from the UK to Rwanda will not have access to fair and efficient procedures for the determination.

      The decision also cited the ruling by Mr Justice Swift, who on Friday dismissed a request for an urgent injunction temporarily halting the flight.

      A statement from the ECHR said an urgent interim measure was granted in the case of KN, “an asylum seeker facing imminent removal to Rwanda”, v the UK.

      “The European Court has indicated to the UK government that the applicant should not be removed to Rwanda until three weeks after the delivery of the final domestic decision in his ongoing judicial review proceedings,” it said.

      Earlier, the prime minister hinted again that the UK could leave the European convention on human rights to make it easier to remove illegal migrants from the UK.

      Asked whether it was time for the UK to withdraw from the ECHR after the government’s difficulty in implementing its Rwanda policy, the prime minister said: “Will it be necessary to change some laws to help us as we go along? It may very well be.”

      In April, at the launch of the Rwanda policy, Johnson had said that thousands of asylum seekers would be sent away, and that the first flight would leave in May.

      The scheme has been beset with “teething problems”, Johnson has admitted. The number of asylum seekers expected to be sent to Rwanda fell from 130 at the start of last week, to 31 on Friday, to just seven on Tuesday.

      Most successfully lodged appeals claiming that sending those seeking sanctuary in the UK to an east African state with a poor human rights record breaches their human rights or that they have been victims of modern slavery.

      At a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Johnson also implied that lawyers representing asylum seekers are aiding human traffickers who charge thousands for journeys in dangerous boats across the Channel.

      “They are, I’m afraid, undermining everything that we’re trying to do to support safe and legal routes for people to come to the UK and to oppose the illegal and dangerous routes,” he said.

      He said what the “criminal gangs are doing and what … those who effectively are abetting the work of the criminal gangs are doing, is undermining people’s confidence in the safe and legal system, undermining people’s general acceptance of immigration”.

      Campaigners for refugee rights welcomed the decision and warned that the policy is still being pursued.

      Enver Solomon, CEO of Refugee Council, said the government should have a grown-up conversation with France and the EU about dealing with refugees, particularly in the Channel.

      “Those threatened with removal are people who have escaped war, persecution, torture, and violence – many of whom have only been prevented from flying due to individual legal interventions declaring it a clear breach of their human rights to do so. The Refugee Council has also had to directly intervene to stop young people being removed to Rwanda because they were falsely assessed as adults.

      “Government claims that this deal would act as a deterrent to end the model of people-traffickers, have already been disproven with the numbers of people travelling across the channel almost doubling on the same time last year. We always knew these measures would do little to stop desperate people making dangerous journeys to the UK, because they do absolutely nothing to address the reasons people come.”

      Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the Public and Commercial Services union, said: “We’re pleased the courts have ruled to stop this flight. It’s time for the government to stop this inhumane policy which is the basest of gesture politics and start to engage seriously with sorting out the asylum system so those who come to our country seeking refuge are treated fairly and according to the law.”

      Makolo, the Rwandan government spokesperson, told a press conference in Kigali on Tuesday that there were “misconceptions” about what Rwanda was like and “some of this is perpetuated by the media”.

      “When the first flights land here in Kigali the new arrivals will be welcomed and looked after and supported to make new lives here. We will provide support with their asylum applications, including legal support, translation services and we will provide decent accommodation.”

      Downing Street justified the estimated £500,000 expense of the flight, saying that immigration costs the UK taxpayer £1.5bn every year already, with almost £5m a day on accommodating asylum seekers in hotels.

      On Monday, 138 people reached the UK in three boats, while more than 200 arrived on Tuesday, with more than 10,000 migrants recorded as making the journey so far this year.

      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/jun/14/european-court-humam-right-makes-11th-hour-intervention-in-rwanda-asylu

      #CEDH #CourEDH #justice

  • The international community must prevent the forcible transfer of Masafer Yatta communities, approved by Israel’s High court of Justice
    05 mai 2022 | B’Tselem
    http://www.btselem.org/press_release/20220505_international_community_must_prevent_the_forcible_transfer_of_masa
    https://www.btselem.org/sites/default/files/styles/1200x440/public/2022-05/khirbat_al_markaz.jpg?itok=uKhOKYgi.jpg

    After more than 20 years of legal proceedings, Israel’s High Court of Justice ruled yesterday (May 4) that the forcible transfer of hundreds of Palestinians from their homes and the destruction of their communities – for the clear purpose of taking over their lands in the service of Jewish interests – is legal. The justices have thus proved once again that the occupied cannot expect justice from the occupier’s court.

    The decision, weaving baseless legal interpretation with decontextualized facts, makes it clear that there is no crime which the high court justices will not find a way to legitimize. Employing sugarcoated language, hypocrisy, and lies, the justices once again fulfilled their role in Israel’s regime of Jewish supremacy and paved the way for the crime of forcible transfer to be committed, while reversing reality: the ruling cast Palestinian victims as the “unlawful” offenders, while portraying the apartheid regime as the victim.

    The international community must prevent Israel from forcibly transferring the Masafer Yatta communities and make sure, should this crime be committed, that those responsible for it – including government ministers, the military top echelons, and the supreme court justices – will be held accountable.

    #colonialisme_de_peuplement

    • Israeli court paves way for eviction of 1,000 Palestinians from West Bank area | Palestinian territories
      Bethan McKernan in Jerusalem | Thu 5 May 2022| The Guardian
      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/05/israeli-court-evict-1000-palestinians-west-bank-area
      https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/7245e63f1d05567cc1b6412e1fa97a9588603088/0_233_5904_3543/master/5904.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

      After a two-decade legal battle, Israel’s high court has ruled that about 1,000 Palestinians can be evicted from an area of the West Bank and the land repurposed for Israeli military use, in one of the single biggest expulsion decisions since the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories began in 1967.

      About 3,000 hectares of Masafer Yatta, a rural area of the south Hebron hills under full Israeli control and home to several small Palestinian villages, was designated as a “firing zone” by the Israeli state in the 1980s, to be used for military exercises, in which the presence of civilians is prohibited.

      According to the Geneva conventions pertaining to humanitarian treatment in war, it is illegal to expropriate occupied land for purposes that do not benefit the people living there, or to forcibly transfer the local population. (...)

    • La justice israélienne donne le feu vert pour l’expulsion d’environ 1000 Palestiniens
      RFI - 5 mai 2022 - Avec notre correspondante à Ramallah, Alice Froussard
      https://www.rfi.fr/fr/moyen-orient/20220505-la-justice-isra%C3%A9lienne-donne-le-feu-vert-pour-l-expulsion-d-enviro

      Une délégation de l’Union européenne en visite avec l’ONG Breaking the Silence à Masafer Yatta, en octobre 2020. AFP - HAZEM BADER

      À Masafer Yatta, au sud de la Cisjordanie occupée, dans les collines à proximité d’Hébron, une douzaine de villages palestiniens et environ un millier de personnes peuvent être expulsés à tout moment, pour que les terres soient réservées à l’entraînement de l’armée israélienne. La Cour suprême l’a approuvé dans la nuit de mercredi au jeudi 5 mai, après vingt-trois ans de bataille judiciaire entre l’État hébreu et les habitants palestiniens.

      Pour les habitants, des bergers ou des agriculteurs palestiniens pour la plupart, c’est une zone rurale, pauvre, aride, de 3 000 hectares, avec des airs de paysages lunaires. Mais pour l’armée israélienne, cette étendue de terre a un autre nom : la zone de tir 918.

      Souvent, les soldats viennent s’entraîner, parcourent les champs en blindés et leurs hélicoptères volent tout près des maisons. Parfois, certaines d’entre elles sont détruites, au détriment de la communauté locale. La bataille judiciaire a duré vingt-trois ans. Dans la nuit de mercredi à jeudi, la Cour suprême a rendu sa décision, donnant le feu vert à l’expulsion et au transfert forcé d’environ 1 000 Palestiniens. Il s’agit d’une des plus importantes décisions d’expulsions depuis l’occupation israélienne des territoires palestiniens en 1967. (...)

  • Décharge budgétaire de #Frontex bloquée : un pas symbolique de plus vers le respect des droits humains

    Ce 4 mai, le #Parlement_européen a voté contre la #décharge_budgétaire (2020) de l’agence Frontex, suivant de ce fait, l’avis adopté par sa #commission_de_contrôle_budgétaire (#CONT) il y a un mois. Cela signifie que le parlement affirme que l’agence Frontex doit réformer de toute urgence et de façon radicale son orientation et son fonctionnement interne.

    En effet, en mars 2022, la #commission_CONT a bloqué la décharge du #budget de Frontex suite « à l’incapacité de l’agence à remplir les conditions prévues dans le précédent rapport de décharge du Parlement, mais aussi aux conclusions de l’#Office_européen_de_la_lutte_anti-fraude (#OLAF) au sujet d’actes de #harcèlement, de #mauvaise_conduite et de #refoulements de migrants impliquant Frontex ». Les députés de la commission CONT ont estimé « que rien n’a été fait concernant les rapports faisant état de transgressions des #droits_fondamentaux en Grèce et que les opérations de renvoi de migrants par la Hongrie ont continué en 2020, malgré un arrêt de la Cour de justice de l’UE les jugeant incompatibles avec le droit européen. »

    Pour rappel, de nombreuses enquêtes et rapports récents émanant de la société civile et d’institutions officielles européennes mettent en cause l’agence pour ses agissements complices en matière de refoulements et de #violences envers des personnes exilées ainsi que pour sa mauvaise gestion interne [pour plus de détails, lire la récente Note politique #28 du CNCD-11.11.11 « Frontex : droits humains en danger » : https://www.cncd.be/Frontex-Droits-humains-en-danger). Ces accusations de connivence voir de complicité de l’agence dans ces violations, ont entrainé, ce 29 avril, la démission de son Directeur, François Leggeri.

    « C’est un nouveau signal encourageant lancé par une haute institution européenne ! » se réjouit le CNCD-11.11.11. Frontex sait dorénavant que ses activités sont sous surveillance vis-à-vis du respect des droits fondamentaux. Elle va devoir se plier aux exigences de #transparence, de mise en #responsabilité et de #contrôle_démocratique pour continuer d’exister.

    Alors que les refoulements sont devenus pratiques courantes pour nombreux Etats européens (Chypre, Malte, Grèce, Lituanie, Pologne, Espagne…), cette décision participe à la lutte contre les violations des droits fondamentaux des personnes migrantes, générées par la politique répressive de l’Union européenne en matière migratoire. A l’heure actuelle, une réorientation du Pacte européen pour la migration et l’asile vers le respect des droits humains, la mobilité et la solidarité est plus que nécessaire [pour plus de détails, lire la récente étude « Migration et asile : analyse du pacte européen »].

    La démission du directeur de l’agence et le vote positif du Parlement européen ce 4 mai doivent donc être l’occasion d’une remise en question plus fondamentale du mandat de l’agence et de la manière dont elle remplit ce dernier. Des réformes structurelles doivent être mises en place au plus vite pour garantir la transparence et le respect des droits humains. La Belgique, qui siège au Conseil d’administration de Frontex, doit utiliser ce levier de manière à obtenir ces réformes.

    https://www.cncd.be/Decharge-budgetaire-de-Frontex

    #migrations #asile #réfugiés #frontières #contrôles_frontaliers

    –—

    Sur la démission de Fabrice Leggeri :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/958737

    Et sur les derniers épisodes autour du budget de Frontex et de son blocage, voir cette métaliste :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/959313

    • EU censures border agency after reports of human rights abuses in Greece

      MEPs refuse to sign off Frontex’s accounts and call for access to inquiry into alleged harassment and misconduct

      The European parliament has refused to sign off the EU border agency’s accounts, saying it had failed to investigate alleged human rights violations of asylum seekers in Greece.

      The vote on the agency, Frontex, came after the resignation last week of its director, Fabrice Leggeri, who left after an investigation by Olaf, the EU’s anti-fraud body.

      The parliament’s decision was based on a report drafted largely before Leggeri resigned, and reflected continuing concern that Frontex was failing to protect asylum seekers’ human rights and uphold EU law.

      MEPs, meeting in Strasbourg, voted to postpone approving the Frontex accounts for 2020, during a session where they approved the budgets of dozens of other EU agencies that spend European taxpayers’ money.

      The Belgian Green MEP Saskia Bricmont, who sits on the European parliament’s civil liberties, justice and home affairs committee, tweeted: “The resignation of [Frontex] director last week does not address structural problems, nor the agency’s contribution to the Fortress Europe policy.”

      Frontex, the European border and coastguard agency, based in Warsaw, received a big increase in funds in response to the migration crisis of 2015-16, when 1.3 million people applied for asylum. Now one of the EU’s best-funded agencies, it had an annual budget of €364m (£307m) in 2020, up 10% on the previous year. There are plans to expand it further, to 10,000 border and coastguards by 2027.

      The delay in approving its accounts has no financial consequences for the agency, but is a form of political censure that empowers MEPs to issue recommendations to its new director. The European parliament delayed approval of Frontex’s accounts in 2021 and rebuked the agency for failing to respond to its previous recommendations.

      In a report giving the reasons for the latest delay, the European parliament’s budgetary control committee referred to problems in two EU member states. In Greece, Frontex “did not evaluate its activities”, despite official reports from national authorities, the Council of Europe and the UN that the agency was operating in areas where “fundamental rights violations” were taking place, it said.

      Frontex was also criticised for not suspending its operations in Hungary, despite a 2020 ruling by the European court of justice that Budapest was failing to implement EU law to protect asylum seekers. After the court judgment, another committee of MEPs called on Frontex to withdraw from Hungary. However, the agency continued working with the Budapest government on a case-by-case basis, including helping to return people denied asylum to their country of origin.

      MEPs also criticised the lopsided gender balance at Frontex, voicing “concern” that three-quarters of senior managers were men. It urged the agency to hold people accountable for 17 cases of harassment, although it did not provide details.

      MEPs also implicitly rebuked EU authorities for not giving them access to the findings of the EU anti-fraud agency, which opened an investigation in 2019 into alleged harassment, misconduct and illegal pushbacks of asylum seekers by Frontex. The Guardian understands that Olaf recommended disciplinary action against Leggeri and two other staff members; Olaf has declined to comment.

      Tomáš Zdechovský, a Czech centre-right MEP responsible for overseeing the Frontex accounts, said it was impossible to approve the accounts without knowing the results of the Olaf investigation. He was “looking forward to a more open dialogue” with the agency after Leggeri’s resignation, he said.

      The resolution criticising Frontex passed with 492 votes, with the centre-right, centre-left, liberals, green and radical left groups agreeing. Opposing the report were 145 MEPs from conservative nationalist parties and the far right.

      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/04/eu-censures-border-agency-after-reports-of-human-rights-abuses-in-greec

  • Songs, tears and reunions: New Zealand welcomes back visitors as border reopens after two years | New Zealand | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/02/songs-tears-and-reunions-new-zealand-welcomes-back-tourists-as-border-r
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/9afee430ab09d0e72c4d2519ce6367e877a10d1a/116_58_4741_2845/master/4741.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Songs, tears and reunions: New Zealand welcomes back visitors as border reopens after two years
    Vaccinated people from about 60 visa-waiver countries now able to enter as part of pandemic reopening plan
    Eva Corlett in Wellington
    @evacorlett
    Mon 2 May 2022 01.46 BST
    Last modified on Mon 2 May 2022 04.09 BST
    Māori songs, tearful embraces and a beloved New Zealand chocolate bar awaited international visitors arriving in New Zealand on Monday – the first foreign guests, other than Australians, to set foot in Aotearoa in more than two years.Since March 2020, the arrival terminals at New Zealand’s international airports have been desolate as the country swiftly closed the border to prevent the arrival of Covid-19.On Monday morning, the border reopened to vaccinated visitors from about 60 visa-waiver countries as part of the government’s phased reopening plan.The first travellers and returning New Zealanders touched down just after 6am at Auckland international airport from Los Angeles, with another flight from San Francisco arriving shortly after.
    (...) Vaccinated international visitors can enter New Zealand if they have had a negative pre-departure Covid test. On arrival, they must self-test for coronavirus, and unless it comes back positive there is no requirement quarantine or self-isolate. All other international visitors will be allowed to enter New Zealand from October, unless the government decides it is safe to do so earlier.
    The tourism minister, Stuart Nash, who greeted arrivals at the gate with a Whittaker’s Peanut Slab chocolate bar, told 1News the reunions “almost bring a tear to the eye”.“People haven’t seen each other for a long, long time – family and friends,” he said. “We have also, of course, got international business people [who] are able to reconnect and they are coming back.”Nash said that while the country is not yet quite back to normal, the reopening was another step towards it.“This has been a long time [coming] – this sends a signal we are now open for business … it is fantastic to see,” Nash said.“Today marks a milestone for visitors from our key northern hemisphere markets in the USA, UK, Germany, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Canada and others, who can now jump on a plane to come here.”More than 30,000 people are arriving into the country each week – an increase on numbers throughout the pandemic, but well below pre-Covid levels, which were close to 25,000 people each day.
    Nash said international flight searches to New Zealand were running 19% higher than in pre-Covid times.Auckland airport’s chief executive Carrie Hurihanganui said 9,000 passengers would be arriving and departing on 43 international flights on Monday – three times the number in March. The airport has boosted its staff by 40 people, and will continue to do so in the coming months, she said.Hurihanganui said the reunions were giving her “goosebump moments”.“It’s been a pleasure to be here today, and the fact we can play a role in welcoming people back to Aotearoa is fantastic,” she told 1News outside the arrivals gate.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#nouvellezelande#frontiere#sante#ouverture#pandemie#vaccination#tourisme