US will boost 'do not travel' advisories to 80% of world due to Covid-19 cases surge
The US State Department said on Monday it will support its "Don't Travel" direction to about 80% of nations around the world, refering to "extraordinary danger to voyagers" from the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The State Department has effectively recorded 34 out of around 200 nations as "Level 4: Do Not Travel," including places like Chad, Kosovo, Kenya, Brazil, Argentina, Haiti, Mozambique, Russia and Tanzania.
"This update will bring about a huge expansion in the quantity of nations at Level 4: Do Not Travel, to around 80% of nations around the world," the office said in an explanation.
Getting to 80% would suggest adding almost 130 nations.
The State Department said the move doesn't suggest a reassessment of ebb and flow wellbeing circumstances in certain nations, yet rather "mirrors a change in the State Department's Travel Advisory framework to depend more on (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's) existing epidemiological evaluations."
Most Americans were at that point kept from heading out to a lot of Europe due to COVID-19 limitations. Washington has banned essentially all non-U.S. residents who have as of late been in a large portion of Europe, China, Brazil, Iran and South Africa.
The White House has given no timetable for when it may facilitate those limitations.
Requested remark on the State Department declaration, Airlines for America, an exchange bunch addressing major U.S. transporters, said "the U.S. aircraft industry has been a solid backer for the advancement of a danger based, information driven guide for reestablishing global travel."

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