The Philippines has approved a plan to allow entry to fully-vaccinated international tourists, its tourism ministry says, following moves by other Southeast Asian countries to relax travel curbs.
Manila’s coronavirus taskforce “approved in principle the entry of fully vaccinated tourists” from countries with low COVID-19 cases, the ministry said, adding guidelines are still to be finalised.
The Philippines, known for its diving and thousands of tropical islands, saw an 83 per cent drop in foreign arrivals last year, receiving nearly 1.4 million visitors, compared to nearly 8.2 million in 2019.
Japan, South Korea and China are its biggest tourism markets.
The Philippines imposed some of Asia’s tightest entry requirements during the pandemic and has been one of the region’s worst-hit countries in terms of cases, deaths and economic losses.
Just more than a quarter of its population has been vaccinated.

Neighbours Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia have also announced various degrees of reopening in recent weeks, after progress in vaccinating their local populations.
“Allowing tourists from green countries or territories that have the majority of its population vaccinated and with low infection rate, will greatly help in our recovery efforts,” tourism minister Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said in the statement.
The Philippines includes on its ‘green’ list of approved countries Japan, China, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and India, among others.
Australia is currently on the Philippines’ ‘yellow’ list.
Visitors from yellow-listed countries are required to go through mandatory quarantine and test for COVID-19 at a government-approved facility on arrival.
Source: AAP.
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