Vaccinations must be administered within three months of the
travel period and visitors will still be required to show
negative COVID-19 test results within three days of their
departure, Anutin Charnvirankul told a news conference.
Those not yet inoculated but with coronavirus-free certificates
would be quarantined for 10 days, he said.
"Foreigners travelling to Thailand with vaccination certificates
in accordance with the requirements of each brands, will need to
quarantine for only seven days," Anutin said, referring to the
doses needed to be effective.
Thailand's flight limits, its strict entry requirements and
mandatory quarantine for all arrivals have been central to its
success in limiting the spread of the virus to just over 26,000
cases and 85 deaths.
Those curbs have decimated its vital tourism sector, however,
prompting widespread jobs losses and business closures and
contributing to the country's deepest economic traction in over
two decades.
The country received close to 40 million visitors in 2019.
The new measures do not apply to those travelling from Africa,
who would still be subject to quarantine for two weeks due to
concerns about other variants of the virus.
Vaccinated Thai nationals without a certificate showing they are
coronavirus-free need to spend one week in quarantine after two
negative tests in the country.
After October, if Thailand inoculates 70% of medical personnel
and at-risk groups, there could be more easing of restriction,
Anutin said, adding it was possible quarantine could be waived
completely.
Thailand has so far vaccinated 27,497 people, mostly medical
workers, using the Sinovac Biotech vaccine. It has ordered 61
million doses in total of the AstraZeneca vaccine with mass
vaccinations slated to begin in June
Anutin said the country may need to order an additional 10 to 20
million doses, which it could source from other producers.
(Reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat and Chayut Setboonsarng;
Editing by Martin Petty)
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