PCR test no longer required for arriving passengers to Jordan from March

February 18

 

Jordan on Thursday announced measures to ease the COVID-19 restrictions from March 1, canceling the PCR test requirement for all arriving passengers.

 

The decision was announced by Jordan's Minister of State for Media Affairs Faisal Shboul during a joint press conference with Health Minister Firas Hawari, the state-run Petra news agency reported.

 

Shboul said that those who test positive for the virus will have to be isolated for five days starting from the date of sample collection and are exempted from another PCR test when the isolation ends.

 

No PCR test is required anymore for those attending concerts, weddings or gatherings, he said.

 

Starting from Sunday, in-class education will restart and only the infected students are required to attend online classes, said Shboul.

 

After the end of the current pandemic wave in the country, the epidemiological report will be issued on a weekly basis instead of daily, the minister added.

 

For his part, Hawari called on the public to be double-vaccinated, and urged those who have received the second dose longer than three months to get the third dose, so as to increase immunity against the virus and its variants.

 

The Jordanian Health Ministry will start to vaccinate the 5-11 age group from next week, he noted.

 

He added that more than 70 percent of the targeted group aged 18 and above in Jordan have received the COVID-19 vaccine, while the percentage of vaccination among school students aged between 12 to 17 stands at only 20 percent.

 

xinhua