TRENDING NEWS
  • UN Tourism Members advance agenda for Europe as region leads global recovery
  • Sustainable tourism market to grow at 14% CAGR by 2032
  • UN Tourism launches investment guidelines for Albania
  • 'UAE, Egypt, Vietnam popular among Indian solo travellers'
  • Oman Air mulls single aircraft-type operating model
  • Etihad Airways adds Al Qassim to its route network

Karnataka’s new COVID-19 norms create confusion among travellers

The sudden enforcement of new COVID-19 guidelines, requiring a negative RTPCR report, by the Karnataka government resulted in confusion at the inter-State check posts particularly along the border with Maharashtra with long lines of vehicles piling up.

The revised guidelines were issued in the wake of a surge in cases in neighbouring States.

The new guidelines announced on July 30 night, mandate that travellers to the State carry a fresh RTPCR negative report unlike the earlier system when a vaccination certificate was an option. As per the new rules, only certificates not older than 72 hours are valid entry documents.

Police and health workers at the inter-State check posts refused entry to vehicles carrying passengers without the required RTPCR negative reports. The move caused chaos as several travellers are not aware of the new norm. Even those having COVID negative report found it difficult to enter the State from Maharashtra as a long queue of vehicles delayed the process of checking their reports.

Though some travellers said they had received two doses of vaccines and should be allowed to enter, the police insisted that the rules had changed and that RTPCR test was compulsory.

At the Attibele check post near Bengaluru, bordering with Tamil Nadu, government officials were screening vehicles bearing registration numbers of Kerala and Maharashtra which were coming from both Kerala and Tamil Nadu. People who failed to show negative RTCPR reports were asked to go back.

Deputy Commissioner of Bengaluru Urban District J. Manjunath said, “We have heightened the surveillance at the checkpost. If passengers fail to produce negative RTCPR reports, they are sent back. In emergency cases, health staff are doing RAT tests at the check post,” he said. (Source The Hindu)

Read Previous

Delhi zoo reopens for public after being temporarily shut during Covid 2nd wave

Read Next

Turkey’s Arslantepe Mound added to UNESCO World Heritage list

Download Magazine