RIYADH: Saudis and expats stranded abroad bombarded travel agents and booking sites with flight requests on Sunday after the Kingdom lifted its latest travel ban.
Entry by air, land and sea had been suspended for two weeks after the discovery in the UK and elsewhere of a new mutant strain of the coronavirus that is 70 percent more infectious than the original.
Travel resumed at 11 a.m. on Sunday, but non-Saudis coming from countries where new variants of the virus had been detected have been asked to stay at least 14 days outside these countries and take a PCR test before entering the Kingdom.
Many expats have been stuck abroad and are still struggling to return to the Kingdom, with available flights in short supply.
Nasir Jawed, a private sector worker, left the Kingdom early last year to spend time with his family in India, and has been unable to get back since. He is now stranded in Dubai. “First I languished for 10 months in India waiting for the flights to resume,” he said.
“Now, again, when I reached the UAE to return to Ƶ, after remaining in the UAE for 14 days quarantine, flights to Ƶ were again canceled.”
Jawed said he was struggling to have his flight ticket reissued, as were many others. The earliest available Saudia flight to Ƶ was in 16 days, he said, which may be an issue for blue-collar workers who could not afford to stay in hotels.
Other airlines’ flights were also full, Jawed said. “Same conditions, same problems … no flights for the next few days.”
Cases of the new coronavirus variant, SARS-CoV-2 B.1.1.7, which was first detected in the UK in September and made public in November, have been growing rapidly.
Cases have been reported in Turkey, Iceland, Jordan, the UAE, Japan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Singapore, South Korea, China, India, Australia, Taiwan, the US, Canada, Chile, Australia and Brazil. South Africa has recorded another strain, known as SARS-CoV-2 501.V2.
Some countries took similar precautionary measures to Ƶ to prevent the spread of the new variants. Although they are more infectious and therefore more transmissible, there is no evidence to suggest that they cause more serious illness or death.