Australia announced Monday, November 22, that it will welcome international students, skilled workers and working holiday visa holders again from next month, easing some of the world's toughest Covid restrictions.
Twenty months after Australia closed its borders, some visa holders, as well as Japanese and South Korean citizens, will be able to enter the territory from December 1.
"Australia is reopening to the world,"
Home Secretary Karen Andrews said in announcing the news, adding that it was
"another step forward for Australia"
.
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Australian citizens, visa holders and citizens of Japan, South Korea and Singapore will now be able to travel to the country with only a negative Covid-19 test before departure if they are vaccinated. However, some Australian states still require a quarantine on entry. Scott Morrison's government lifted restrictions on overseas travel for Australians last month, sparking a boom in summer bookings from the southern hemisphere.
But he had categorically refused to ease restrictions for non-Australians, a move that had stranded around 1.4 million qualified visa holders in Australia, with no possibility of return if they decided to leave the country.
Professional groups and academia have been pushing for permission to re-enter visa holders with vaccines, as they scramble to fill the positions and prepare to enter a third year of restrictions.
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According to Universities Australia, which represents the university sector, 130,000 international students are still out of the country, raising concerns that many Asian students are choosing to study face-to-face in the United States or Europe rather than paying for online courses based in Australia. Australia.
No indication has yet been given as to the country's reopening to tourism, a blow to the hard-hit sector, as the number of visitors has virtually collapsed since the border was closed in March 2020.