Ireland May Bring Further Restrictions for Coronavirus Hotspots

The deadly novel virus outbreak has created a major stir around the world in recent times infecting more than 14.9 million people globally

Ireland might bring in further travel restrictions for the nations with very high rates of coronavirus or COVID-19, the Foreign Minister Simon Coveney mentioned on Wednesday after the government lifted the 14-day quarantine requirement for the 15 European countries.

Ireland, which has one of the lesser rates of the novel virus infections in the European Union with around five cases per 100,000 people in the last 14 days, decided late on Tuesday to drop the restriction for the people who are coming from nations with a similar or lower rate.

Coveney said the government would turn its attention in the coming weeks to whether it should introduce steps beyond the 14-day quarantine from areas hardest hit, including a potential requirement to take a coronavirus test before departure. "We're looking at countries that may effectively become hot spots for COVID-19 in the months ahead, or indeed regions within countries, and looking at ways in which we can deal with that risk," Coveney told national broadcaster RTE.

Ireland to Bring Further Travel Restrictions

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Arrivals into Ireland from Malta, Finland, Norway, Hungary, Italy, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Cyprus, Slovakia, Greenland, Greece, Gibraltar, Monaco and San Marino no longer have to restrict their movements. The selection was shorter than many other countries' "green lists", including British-run Northern Ireland, which shares an open land border with Ireland where no travel restrictions are imposed.

While Irish travelers returning from the 15 countries will not have to quarantine either, the government took out full-page newspaper advertisements on Wednesday telling people that the safest things to do was not to travel anywhere.

"The message is still clear, the safest thing to do is not to take your holidays abroad, look after your family, spend your money at home and holiday at home," Coveney said, noting that, while travel to and from Ireland was at around seven-eight percent of its usual level, 50,000 Irish people were still traveling abroad a week.

(With agency inputs)

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