France, Greece, and Portugal have become the latest European countries to relax their COVID-19-related regulations, with the three nations easing travel restrictions.
Vaccinated tourists won’t have to provide a negative COVID-19 test to enter the countries, although unvaccinated people will still have to do so. Greece also dropped pre-departure testing requirements.
French officials announced this week that the country would drop the requirement of a negative COVID-19 test for vaccinated people entering the country from outside the EU.
“We again required tests in December over the Omicron variant. In the coming days, we will announce that tests are no longer needed for vaccinated people,” Clément Beaune, with the Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, told France 2 TV on Feb. 8.
The relaxation of COVID-19 rules comes as Sweden, Norway, Denmark, the UK, Ireland, and the Czech Republic have dropped their own domestic COVID-19 restrictions, including vaccine passports in some cases.
Marin said the lifting of restrictions should be done in a gradual manner, arguing that the COVID-19 pandemic is still placing a “relatively high burden” on hospital resources.
“That’s why I want that we give them up as soon as possible,” she said during an event with reporters, the Helsinki Times reported.
Denmark Health Minister Magnus Heunicke said in late January that the country would only keep COVID-19 restrictions in place if they were “truly necessary.”
Earlier in January, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the end of some COVID-19-related restrictions in England, such as passports, mask mandates, and work restrictions. The governments in Scotland and Wales also announced at the time the removal of certain Omicron coronavirus variant curbs, although mandatory indoor mask-wearing and COVID-19 passes will remain in place.
Days later, the Republic of Ireland’s leadership announced the end of COVID-19 certificates, social distancing, capacity limits, and curfews.
“Humans are social beings and we Irish are more social than most. As we look forward to this spring, we need to see each other again,“ Taoiseach Micheál Martin said. ”We need to see each other smile. We need to sing again.”
On Jan. 20, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told reporters that the EU should approach COVID-19 in the same manner that it approaches influenza, as frequent studies and data have shown the Omicron variant is far less virulent than previous variants.
“What we are saying is that in the next few months and years, we are going to have to think, without hesitancy and according to what science tells us, how to manage the pandemic with different parameters,” he said on Jan. 17, according to The Associated Press.