Malaysia to allow quarantine-free entry for fully vaccinated tourists from Apr 1
Malaysia will reopen its border to international visitors from April 1, allowing fully vaccinated travellers to enter the country without quarantine, Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob said on Tuesday (March 8).
Visitors will be required to undergo pre-departure tests (RT-PCR) and upon-arrival tests (RTK-Antigen under professional supervision) 24 hours after arrival.
At present, visitors can enter Malaysia only via the Singapore and Langkawi travel bubbles for the fully vaccinated.
In an address broadcast live on several national television networks, Datuk Seri Ismail said the border reopening was part of the move to transition into the "endemic" phase of living with the virus.
Malaysia shut its borders two years ago on March 18, 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic was spreading rapidly around the world.
"The government has decided to reopen the country's borders on 1 April," he said.
"I believe this has been long-awaited by the people. This announcement will also boost the economy as a whole, in particular the tourism industry that has been badly-affected by the pandemic," he added.
Travellers who wish to enter Malaysia only need to download the MySejahtera tracking application and fill up a pre-departure travel form.
International travellers will no longer be required to apply for MyTravelPass which would be abolished.
While masks will still be mandatory during the transition phase, PM Ismail announced further easing of Covid-19 rules beginning April 1.
Unvaccinated individuals will be allowed to cross state lines, and there will no longer be limits on opening hours or to the capacity of premises.
Malaysia has been keeping its economy open despite the Omicron wave of the pandemic with daily caseloads hitting record highs and hospitalisations around five-month highs.
Malaysia logged 26,856 daily new cases on Monday (March 7).
"In the last few weeks, the number of daily Covid-19 cases has been spiking due to the Omicron wave. However, the number of cases in categories 3, 4 and 5 are very low, which is 0.7 per cent," said Mr Ismail, referring to the serious categories of Covid-19 that include hospitalisations.
The number of patients requiring intensive care are "under control for now, at 42 per cent capacity," he added,
Nearly 80 per cent of Malaysia's total population has been fully vaccinated, while 64 per cent of Malaysians have taken a booster dose. The country has also been gradually easing its Covid-19 protocols.
Asymptomatic close contacts of Covid-19 patients are no longer required to undergo mandatory quarantine, while Malaysia has also dropped a requirement for inbound travellers to undergo testing within six days of arrival under the vaccinated travel lane (VTL) with Singapore.
Copyrights: The Straits Times/Asia News Network
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