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TRAVEL NEWS

US to end Covid testing requirement for travellers from Europe

Authorities in the USA have announced the end of the Covid-testing requirement for arrivals from Europe, meaning that fully vaccinated people will soon be able to travel between Europe and the US without needing pre-travel tests.

US to end Covid testing requirement for travellers from Europe
Photo by Daniel SLIM / AFP

Most of Europe had dropped the testing requirement for fully-vaccinated arrivals in the spring, but the US has maintained the requirement to show proof of a negative test for all arrivals.

However on Friday, the Biden administration announced that it would not renew the testing requirement.

The new rule is expected to come into effect at 12.01 Sunday EDT, until then passengers will still need to show a negative Covid test before they can board a plane to the US.

The US currently bars unvaccinated travellers from entry – although this does not apply to US citizens, US residents or those travelling for essential reasons – there was no announcement on lifting this restriction. 

The CDC said that testing requirements could be reinstated if new variants of Covid emerge, and added that it continues to recommend pre-travel testing. 

Covid travel rules vary between individual countries in Europe, but most countries now only require pre-departure tests for unvaccinated travellers. Check the rules of the country you are travelling to for full details. 

To be counted as ‘fully vaccinated’ travellers must have received both doses of an EMA-approved vaccine – Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca (or a single dose of Janssen).

If their vaccination was more than nine months ago, they need a booster shot in order to be considered fully vaccinated – people who have had a booster do not need a second, even if their booster shot was more than nine months ago.

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TRAVEL NEWS

Danish ferry averts collision with ’unknown’ ship

A ferry from the Molslinjen company, which operates between the ports in Aarhus and Sjællands Odde, was on Friday forced to turn around to avoid an unidentified ship.

Danish ferry averts collision with ’unknown’ ship

The ferry company’s head of communications confirmed to Danish media that the Sjællands Odde-bound boat had been forced into the evasive manoeuvre shortly after leaving Aarhus.

Witnesses who spoke to the tabloid newspaper BT were reported as saying that passengers had been informed by the captain that the ship which the ferry moved to avoid was a Russian warship, but Molslinjen’s spokesperson said this could not be confirmed.

“I don’t know this but I assume that the experienced captain knows this. So I’m thinking that if he has said that, it’s very probably correct. They can follow [other vessels] with their equipment and it’s their job to know what they are meeting,” the spokesperson, Jesper Maack, told the Ekstra Bladet daily.

The Danish Defence Command (Forsvarskommandoen), Denmark’s military command authority, has confirmed that a Russian frigate was sailing north through the Great Belt strait on Friday.

Denmark’s navy routinely monitors Russian military ships which sail through Danish waters, the authority told newswire Ritzau.

The Defence Command said it had no knowledge of any evasive manoeuvre performed by the Molslinjen ferry.

Maack told BT that the ferry made the decision to turn while still a good distance from the ship because the ship was not following relevant maritime rules and did not respond over radio.

The manoeuvre was undramatic and no one was in danger, he added.

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