Covid-19 Omicron: IATA Calls for Governments to Repeal Travel Bans, Follow WHO's Advice
Covid-19 Omicron: IATA Calls for Governments to Repeal Travel Bans, Follow WHO's Advice
Public health organisations, including the WHO, have advised against travel curbs to contain the spread of Omicron.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) called for governments to follow World Health Organisation’s (WHO) advice and immediately rescind travel bans that were introduced in response to the Omicron variant of coronavirus.

Public health organisations, including the WHO, have advised against travel curbs to contain the spread of Omicron.

“After nearly two years with Covid-19 we know a lot about the virus and the inability of travel restrictions to control its spread," IATA Director General Willie Walsh said.

ALSO READ: Covid-19 Omicron: International Flights to Resume on Jan 31 in India – Details Here

“But the discovery of the Omicron variant induced instant amnesia on governments which implemented knee-jerk restrictions in complete contravention of advice from the WHO – the global expert."

According to Walsh, the goal is to move away from the uncoordinated, evidence-absent, risk-unassessed mess that travellers face.

“As governments agreed at ICAO and in line with the WHO advice, all measures should be time-bound and regularly reviewed. It is unacceptable that rushed decisions have created fear and uncertainty among travellers just as many are about to embark on year-end visits to family or hard-earned vacations."

Also Watch:

On Thursday, the DGCA announced that commercial international flights from India will resume on January 31 amid rising fear of the new Omicron variant. Ahead of this, the DGCA had announced that the scheduled flight will resume from December 15. This order was revised when the nation displayed concerns over another wave due to the new variant. The DGCA had also announced that the order would not affect the current flights that are operating as it is only for the complete resumption that has now been postponed.

(With inputs from IANS)

Read all the Latest Auto News here

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://filka.info/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!