EU considering blocking US tourists due to high Covid-19 infection rate: US media

Authored by france24.com and submitted by mod_89
image for EU considering blocking US tourists due to high Covid-19 infection rate: US media

(File Photo) The Roman Coliseum in Rome re-opened on June 1, 2020 after three months of lockdown.

EU nations may close their borders to US travelers as they seek to reopen their economies to tourism because of how Washington has handled the pandemic, The New York Times reported Tuesday, citing unnamed European officials.

One official involved in talks among European Union members about who should be allowed to visit the bloc shared draft lists of acceptable travelers -- Americans were not on them.

A second official involved in the talks confirmed the lists, which have not been made public, and two others confirmed their content.

It was not clear if US officials were made aware in advance of the fact that Americans would be excluded when the EU progressively reopens to those outside the bloc from July 1.

Both draft lists would allow travelers from China, where the virus emerged late last year, but exclude Americans, as well as Brazilians and Russians.

The officials interviewed by the Times said the United States could later be added to the list of acceptable travelers if the country's coronavirus case numbers drop.

But those officials said it was "highly unlikely" that an exception would initially be made for the United States, the Times reported.

The report also makes clear that the composition of the lists is still in flux and could be changed before the deadline.

Concern about possible second wave in Europe

The US is by far the nation hardest hit by the deadly novel coronavirus, with more than 2.3 million cases and more than 120,000 deaths confirmed.

EU countries have largely been closed to all non-bloc citizens, except in cases of "essential travel," since mid-March.

Similarly, the United States closed its borders to most European nationals around the same time.

Spikes in infection rates in several US states have worried European officials about the possibility that travelers could spark a second wave of infections on the continent.

But barring US tourists could mean millions of dollars in lost tourism revenue for countries trying to get back on their feet economically after months of lockdowns.

Indeed, some EU countries have already opened their borders to non-EU visitors.

Daily newsletterReceive essential international news every morning Subscribe

ThatGuyBench on June 24th, 2020 at 14:21 UTC »

Dunno, here in Netherlands it doesn't seem that pandemic is taken as seriously as people think it is. I was studying abroad when the pandemic hit in Thailand, and everywhere people wore masks, to enter stores you had to have mask, the temperature was measured pretty much anywhere, and per capita, cases were extremely low for the congested city of Bangkok. Then I return to the Netherlands, and I feel like the only fool with the mask on here, yet per capita cases are way higher here.

Edit: Wow this comment grew quite a bit! I am not saying the Netherlands doesn't put effort into the fight. They certainly have made strides in battling the pandemic. It's just that different places have different cultural, social, and other differences that affect the constraints people have. The policymakers seems to have done a lot, and having masks for everyone is probably much harder here because of individualism and no preexisting mask culture and lesser production capacity, therefore other means of pandemic suppression are used.

NineteenSkylines on June 24th, 2020 at 11:17 UTC »

as well as Brazilians and Russians

FemmeDesFleurs on June 24th, 2020 at 10:26 UTC »

Trump's presidency started with him trying to lock people out of the U.S. and now it will end with the rest of the world trying to lock the U.S. out of their countries...