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Taiwan welcomes callers after ending COVID counterblockade rules

Taiwan began drinking callers on Thursday after ending an obligatory counterblockade to control the spread of COVID- 19, first with a gift of cuddly toy black bears for the stint group, which flew shortly after night.

Taiwan has kept some of its entry and counterblockade rules in place as a large corridor of the rest of Asia has been relaxed or distant entirely. However, June reduced the number of days needed for appearance in insulation from seven.

While Taiwan has reported nearly 7 million domestic cases since the morning of this time, the government has said life has to return to normal with its continuing, especially given the high vaccination rates.

The government ate the first advents to profit from the end of the counterblockade on a flight from Bangkok to Taiwan’s main transnational field in Taoyuan outside Taipei.

Agitated excursionists posed for photos amidst a crowd of media and officers and were met by aeroplane by the Director General of the Tourism Bureau, Chang Shi- Chung.

“This is an occasion to bring life back and rebuild across-border tourism,” Chang told journalists.

Tidarat Tor- Ekbundit, a sightseer from Thailand, said she wasn’t bothered about COVID- 19.

“Not only Taiwan but every country, we must acclimate ourselves to live with COVID,” she said.

Specific rules remain in place, requiring people to cover their health for seven days after appearance and do rapid-fire tests on themselves.

Taiwan’s two leading carriers, China Airlines Ltd and EVA Airways Corp, have ramped up flights, returning capacity on routes curtailed during the pandemic and planning new services to cities such as Da Nang in Vietnam.

Taiwanese citizens and foreign residents have not been banned from leaving and re-entering during the pandemic but have had to quarantine for up to two weeks at home or in hotels.

Before the pandemic, Taiwan was a popular tourist destination, mainly for travellers from Japan, South Korea and Southeast Asia, who were attracted by the island’s cuisine and natural beauty.

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