Chile, a South American country known for its wines and landscapes, plans to reopen its doors to tourists on November 23.
Visitors must travel to Arturo Merino Benez De Santiago International Airport and provide evidence of negative CONTROL of COVID-19 PCR conducted within 72 hours of arrival. They must also provide an affidavit and consent to be monitored daily through an application.
International passengers who meet Chile’s access needs will not have to be quarantined and will be on the loose across the country, assuming they keep officials informed about their fitness and any symptoms of coronavirus they may experience.
“All people in the country, Chilean and foreign, will be subject to 14-day follow-up. They will need to report their symptoms and location,” Chile’s undersecretary of public health, Paula Daza, told La Tercera.
Daza told the post that visitors who do not comply may suffer consequences, even if it is not transparent what it could be.
This application is still under development, La Tercera reported.
In Chile, readers must respect national and local curfews, wear masks in all urban spaces, and be content that restrictions can temporarily replace and upset their plans.
Chile closed its borders to the non-essentials in March, as countries around the world did the same to stop the spread of coronavirus across borders, and since then only Chileans and citizens have been able to participate.
Chile has reported more than a million cases of COVID-19 and nearly 15,000 deaths. Reports peaked in June, with more than 6,000 cases per day, but have since declined to less than 2,000 per day, a point that says La Tercera. even considerations from some experts.
Meena Thiruvengadam is a Travel Leisure contributor who has visited 50 countries on six continents and 47 US states. But it’s not the first time He loves historic plaques, walking through new streets and walking along the beaches. Find her on Twitter and Instagram.