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This Article is From Sep 23, 2021

Thailand Plans to Halve Quarantine as Reopening Seen Delayed

Tourism-reliant Thailand is planning to slash a mandatory quarantine period for vaccinated international travelers to seven days to boost its economy as a wider reopening is seen delayed by a low vaccination rate.

The reduction in quarantine from the current 14 days will help boost Thailand's economy and tourism, according to Opas Karnkawinpong, director-general of the Department of Disease Control. If a shorter isolation period is approved by the nation's Covid-19 task force, it could be effective from October 1, he said.

Under the proposed rules, international travelers with vaccine certificates will still need to be tested for Covid-19 upon arrival and before leaving the quarantine, according to Opas. Visitors without jab certificates arriving by air will be subjected to a 10-day quarantine, while those arriving by land will have to complete a 14-day quarantine. 

Thailand Eyes More Tourists as Cases Slump With More Jabs: Chart

Thai officials have signaled a delay to previously announced plans to scrap the quarantine for visitors to several provinces, including Bangkok and Chiang Mai from Oct. 1, citing their failure to meet the 70% vaccination threshold for local residents. Some tourist destinations, including the resort island of Phuket, already allow inoculated visitors to enter without quarantine. 

Thailand is betting on the return of foreign tourists to revive its economy as the sector generated more than $60 billion from about 40 million visitors in 2019. 

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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