EU urges member states to abolish 'cumbersome' travel restrictions

 

by IANS |

Brussels, Jan 26 (IANS) The European Commission has urged member states to discontinue any additional travel measures introduced when Omicron began to spread across the European Union (EU). Holders of valid EU digital Covid certificates should be allowed to enjoy travel restriction-free, the Commission said.

In a joint statement, Commissioners for Health and Justice, Stella Kyriakides and Didier Reynders on Tuesday said the extra restrictions made travel "more cumbersome and less predictable across the EU."

The 27 member states have now agreed on new recommendations regarding the EU Digital Covid Certificate, they said. The possession of a valid health pass should in principle be sufficient when traveling during the pandemic, and any additional quarantine and testing requirements should be abolished, Xinhua news agency reported.

The Commissioners urged EU governments to follow up on the agreement, which comes into effect on February 1, and implement the common rules without delay "to ensure coordination and clarity for citizens and travelers."

"Each member state decides based on the circumstances it is facing. But Omicron has by now spread across Europe, and it is time to look at the discontinuation of the additional travel measures that a number of member states have introduced in the past weeks," they added.

More than 1.2 billion certificates have been issued, they said, adding: "It is a true European success story that has gone global."

Latest News
Novelty of Rashid Khan has worn off a little, not as intimidating as before, says Kumble ahead of IPL 2026 Sun, Dec 28, 2025, 06:28 PM
Gujarat adding more than 7,000 doctors every year: CM Bhupendra Patel Sun, Dec 28, 2025, 06:27 PM
Meta-owned Instagram hit by brief outage, users report login and app issues Sun, Dec 28, 2025, 05:51 PM
India's youth must lead age of artificial intelligence: Gautam Adani Sun, Dec 28, 2025, 05:48 PM
Ratan Tata reshaped Indian enterprise with integrity: HM Amit Shah Sun, Dec 28, 2025, 05:42 PM