World’s Toughest Travel Curbs Finally Fall to Reopening Urge

People enjoy at a beach as Phuket opens for foreigners, who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), to visit the resort island without quarantine, in Phuket, Thailand, September 19, 2021. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
People enjoy at a beach as Phuket opens for foreigners, who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), to visit the resort island without quarantine, in Phuket, Thailand, September 19, 2021. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha

By Bloomberg News

Some of the world’s longest and toughest COVID-induced border curbs are finally being eased, with Asia-Pacific countries taking their firmest steps yet toward reopening to international travel in recent days.

From Singapore to Sydney, Bali to Bangkok, authorities have announced a flurry of plans to welcome vaccinated travelers by drastically reducing or completely removing quarantine requirements in place for most of the pandemic. For these places, the easing is a significant shift toward opening up just as the traditional year-end holiday season approaches.

“For double-vaccinated people around the world, Sydney, New South Wales is open for business,” state Premier Dominic Perrottet said Friday, as Australia’s most populous state announced it will waive the 14-day quarantine for travelers from November — though the federal government later clarified it would be limited to residents. “We want people back.”

Lengthy quarantine for travelers was a signature of much of the Asia-Pacific region’s containment playbook, with quarantines of as long as 21 days in some places catching most infections at the border. Until the delta variant came along, the strategy helped places like China, Hong Kong, Australia, New Zealand and Singapore all but eliminate the virus at one point. For nations like Thailand and Malaysia, such quarantines helped keep cases from overwhelming the population for a time. But those strict rules left the region falling behind as the rest of the world started reopening months ago.

The New South Wales move followed announcements by Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore earlier in the month to either do away with restrictions on who can enter or ease rules on entry.

A woman walks across a link bridge to a terminal at Changi Airport in Singapore on September 8, 2021. Singapore Trade Minister Gan Kim Yong said the government is committed to reopening the country gradually after reimposing domestic curbs such as making work-from-home the default and cutting the number of diners to deal with a surge in cases.(Photo: ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Singapore in the past week announced quarantine-free travel for vaccinated travelers from countries in Europe, Asia and the U.S., and has signaled more places will be added. Travel, transport and trade are critical for the city, a global financial hub and a gateway to the rest of Asia.

Earlier this week Thailand said from November it will scrap quarantine for vaccinated travelers from five low-risk countries including the U.S., China and the U.K. More nations will be added gradually as the nation seeks to revive its tourism-reliant economy after an earlier experiment involving Phuket was seen as successful.

Indonesia is also reopening, allowing inoculated visitors from more countries to enter and imposing a shorter quarantine period. The country reopened tourist spot Bali, as well as Batam and Bintan islands, to foreign visitors this week.

Philippines, Malaysia

The Philippines has exempted fully vaccinated visitors from low-risk places from quarantines at designated facilities. Malaysia is considering reopening its borders to fully vaccinated travelers from certain countries without the need to undergo mandatory quarantine, National Recovery Council chairman Muhyiddin Yassin said on Friday.

Vietnam plans to reopen Phu Quoc Island to fully vaccinated foreign travelers, mainly from Europe, the U.S., Australia, Northeast Asia and the Middle East, on a trial basis from November. The country eyes fully reopening its borders to international visitors from June 2022, the government said last week, without detailing any quarantine rules.

The drive to reopen is picking up pace as more of the so-called Covid-Zero countries abandon their virus elimination strategies. Authorities from New Zealand to Singapore are now finding ways to accept Covid as endemic.

Driving the decisions to reopen are rising vaccination rates, a growing consensus that the more infectious delta variant has rendered containment regimes less effective, and the urgency to revive export and tourism-dependent economies that have languished for nearly two years.

For residents in Asia, the easing of travel curbs can’t come soon enough. Tales of tragedy and separation, and outrageous attempts to circumvent border rules — one man sailed 3,700 miles to get home to Australia to renew his residency visa — were becoming increasingly common.

Ticket Scramble

The nascent reopening has boosted stocks such as Qantas Airways Ltd. and triggered rallies in the Thai baht. In travel-starved Singapore, the enthusiasm to venture out of the tiny island is so high that customers swamped the websites of Singapore Airlines Ltd. and other travel services in the scramble for tickets.

Some other places in the region, like New Zealand, South Korea, have not yet reached high enough vaccination levels to reopen, but their governments have signaled they intend to do so once inoculation levels are sufficient.

The outlier is China. The world’s second-largest economy remains the last stalwart of Covid Zero and has provided no plans to lift its border controls, which are among the strictest in the world. That has also complicated efforts for the financial hub Hong Kong to keep up with regional rivals like Singapore.

Governments in Asia seeking to reopen are treading cautiously. Singapore has had to rein in the easing of some social restrictions to give its healthcare system time to prepare for the growing number of infections in the community.

A woman takes her antigen rapid test under supervision at a Quick Test Centre during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Singapore on September 28, 2021. Singapore’s Finance Minister Lawrence Wong said earlier this week that the country is committed to reopening, and that recently reimposed curbs are to ensure the health system can handle an increased number of daily cases. REUTERS/Edgar Su

Tensions on the ground are also high as populations used to a zero-tolerance approach are now being asked to treat infections as commonplace. Authorities will have to walk a fine line between answering the growing calls for greater freedoms of movement, and assuaging the concerns of residents concerned about experiencing Covid’s ravages seen elsewhere.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison appeared to downplay any imminent reopening to visitors after the New South Wales announcement, saying the federal government will decide when the border will open for international tourists. Not all of Australia is open — one could get into Sydney from London without quarantine with the latest announcement, but not to other parts of the country.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during a media conference on October 15, 2021 in Sydney, Australia. Prime Minister Scott Morrison has responded to the NSW government's announcement they would lift passenger caps and remove quarantine requirements for vaccinated international travellers from 1 November 2021. The Prime Minister clarified the rules would only apply to Australian citizens, residents and their immediate families. In the same press conference, Prime Minister Scott Morrison also confirmed he would attend 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

There is always the risk, as has happened during this pandemic, that a new variant will emerge to derail these nascent reopening plans. But the realization is growing that turning back may no longer be an option.

“Each country is different but I think that we have shown that even with the most draconian of mask mandates and strict restrictions, the virus will continue to spread,” said Paul Tambyah, Singapore-based President of the Asia Pacific Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infection. “The key has to be vaccination with effective vaccines and protecting the vulnerable.”

© 2021 Bloomberg L.P.