Nepal suspends on-arrival visa for nationals of 5 corona-hit countries

Coronavirus chronicle

TBS Report
03 March, 2020, 07:50 pm
Last modified: 03 March, 2020, 08:13 pm
A Cabinet meeting on Sunday decided to discontinue on-arrival visa for nationals of these five countries to avoid the risk of the deadly diseases being spread in Nepal

The Nepali government has suspended the on-arrival visa regime for nationals of five countries - China, South Korea, Japan, Italy and Iran, which were badly affected by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic, Xinhua reports quoting a Nepali minister.

"A Cabinet meeting on Sunday decided to discontinue on-arrival visa for nationals of these five countries to avoid the risk of the deadly diseases being spread in Nepal," Yogesh Bhattarai, minister for culture, tourism and civil aviation told Xinhua on Monday. 

"The restriction will be applicable from next week," he added. 

Ram Chandra Tiwari, information officer at Nepal's Department of Immigration said on Monday that there has been discussion on whether to suspend the visas for the nationals of these countries for one month or until another notice is issued.

"Nepali embassies abroad will decide whether to provide visas to the nationals of these countries after checking their health certificates," he said.

Nepal has offered on-arrival visa for tourists from all countries other than 12 countries and territories as well as refugees with travel documents.

The nationals from Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Cameroon, Somalia, Liberia, Ethiopia, Iraq, Palestine, Afghanistan, Syria and the refugees with travel documents should currently acquire visa prior to their arrival to Nepal.

Nepal received 169,543 Chinese mainland visitors in 2019 while the number of tourists from Japan stood at 30,534 and those from South Korea stood at 29,680, according to Nepal's Department of Immigration.

Likewise, the Himalayan country received a total of 15,676 Italian tourists and 1,882 Iranian nationals last year, the department said.

Meanwhile, a senior official of Nepal's Ministry of Health of Population said none of the Nepalis evacuated from China's Hubei province, the epicentre of the COVID-19 outbreak, two weeks ago, have been infected with the virus.

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