Saudi Arabia has decided to allow
entry to foreign travellers fully vaccinated with either Sinopharm or Sinovac
vaccines, provided that they also receive a booster shot of either of the four
vaccines approved by the Kingdom, according to the country's e-visa
portal.
"Guests
who have completed two doses of the Sinopharm or Sinovac vaccines will be
accepted if they have received an additional dose of one of the four vaccines
approved in the Kingdom," one of the guidelines for travellers on the
portal says.
The
decision follows the country reopening its doors to international visitors on
August 1, condition to them being inoculated by one of Pfizer, AstraZeneca,
Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccines.
"All
visitors arriving in the country with a valid tourism visa must provide
evidence of a full course of one the four vaccines currently recognised: two
doses of the Oxford/Astra Zeneca, Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna vaccines or a
single dose of the vaccine produced by Johnson and Johnson," a guideline
on the portal says.
Saudi
Arabia had announced last week that it was reopening its
borders to fully vaccinated foreign tourists after a 17-month closure due to
the coronavirus pandemic.
“The
Ministry of Tourism announced that the Kingdom will open its doors to foreign
tourists, and lift... the suspension of entry for tourist visa holders,
starting from August 1,” the Saudi Press Agency had
reported. The report had added that travellers fully vaccinated with
Saudi-approved jabs would be able to enter the Kingdom “without the need for an
institutional quarantine period”, provided they also had proof of a negative PCR
(polymerase chain reaction) Covid-19 test taken within the last 72 hours and
register their details with health authorities.
In
recent years, Riyadh has spent billions trying to build a tourism industry from
scratch as part of efforts to diversify its oil-reliant economy. The
once-reclusive Kingdom began issuing tourist visas for
the first time in 2019 as part of an ambitious push to revamp its global image
and draw visitors.
Between
September 2019 and March 2020, it issued 400,000 — only for the pandemic to
crush that momentum as borders were closed.
Covid-19
also hugely disrupted the Haj and Umrah pilgrimages,
usually a key revenue earner for the Kingdom — in normal times, they together
rake in some $12 billion annually.
Currently,
only immunised pilgrims who are residents of Saudi Arabia are eligible for
Umrah permits.
Given
that scores visit Saudi Arabia from Pakistan for Haj and Umrah and on work
visas every year, a lack of Saudi-approved vaccines in the latter has hampered
travel to the Kingdom for many.
To
address this, Pakistan had taken up the issue with Saudi Foreign Minister
Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud during his day-long visit to
Islamabad last month.
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