Originally Posted by
corporate-wage-slave
Added to the list Bhutan, Timor-Leste, Mongolia, Aruba, Samoa, Kiribati, Micronesia, Tonga, Vanuata, and the Solomon Islands (clearly they haven't run out of obscure options which are near impossible to get to, yet).
Do any of those countries let people in, other than their own citizens and residents?
Originally Posted by
corporate-wage-slave
Modified: Denmark is no longer extra-restricted off the mink issue, but it's still not a travel corridor country, self isolation applies.
So unless I'm misunderstanding, this means that non-citizens who have been to Denmark can enter the UK, that only the passenger (but not the passenger's entire household) needs to quarantine and that essential workers (such as flight attendants) no longer need to quarantine. Is there anything else I'm missing?
Originally Posted by
wilsnunn
An interesting thought about Turkey, here in Europe they are considered bad because of data worries however Singapore (with their no non-citizens/residents without approval from the government) consider them a safer country for arrivals.
The quarantine exemption helps citizens and residents of Singapore who have to do something essential in the UK. They only need to quarantine in Singapore but not in the UK, reducing the total quarantine from four to two weeks. Of course it doesn't help anyone else.