South Africa Reopens to International Travelers—but Not Americans

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South Africa Reopens to International Travelers—but Not Americans

Travelers have been arriving at three main airports.

Photo by Andrea Willmore / Shutterstock

South Africa has reopened to international flights, ending a more than six-month ban on international travel that was part of its restrictions to combat the spread of COVID-19.

A Lufthansa plane from Germany was the first international flight to arrive Thursday morning at Johannesburg’s O.R. Tambo International Airport. Flights from Kenya, Zambia, and Zimbabwe quickly followed. Airports in Cape Town and Durban have also resumed international traffic.

Travelers arriving on international flights must provide a negative COVID-19 test issued no more than 72 hours before their departure.

South Africa still maintains restrictions on international travel. Tourists are not permitted from a list of more than 50 countries, including Russia, Britain, and the U.S, which are deemed high risk because of their levels of COVID-19 cases. The list will be reviewed every two weeks.

Travelers must also have proof of travel insurance to cover a COVID-19 test and quarantine costs, should they have symptoms during their visit.

The trickle of travelers brought a resumption of business to the normally busy Johannesburg airport. Tourism minister Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane, came to the airport to see the return to travel and said the government is satisfied that all COVID-19 protocols are being observed.

“It was quite overwhelming to see that all the passengers who arrived had no difficulties with understanding what is expected from them to produce,” said Kubayi-Ngubane.

Chris Nyamkondiwa, who works in Zambia, said he was happy to return to his home in South Africa to see his family for the first time since the lockdown began. “My family is here, and I work for a mine, so I have not seen them in the past seven months. It has been difficult trying to come back home,” he said.

Another traveler, Anne van Wyk, was scheduled to travel to the U.S to see her children. “Because of the lockdown I was waiting for the borders to open,” said van Wyk. “My children are in the States so I am going to visit them now, it is the first time that it is possible to do that.”

Africa’s most developed economy also reopened its land borders to allow visitors from neighboring countries Botswana, Eswatini (formerly known as Swaziland), Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, and Zimbabwe.

>> Next: AFAR’s South Africa Travel Guide

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