| New Zealand ends social distancing: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern ended all remaining restrictions on people and businesses at midnight Monday, other than strict border controls to keep the virus out, Bloomberg News reports. The South Pacific nation earlier reported that the last of its coronavirus patients has recovered, making it one of the few countries in the world to have successfully eradicated the pathogen and the first among those that suffered a sizable outbreak.
Passport power: Until COVID-19, the blue U.S. passport conveyed an outsized importance and access throughout much of the world. These days, passengers from Slovenia, Latvia, and Lebanon may have an easier time entering Greece, for example, than a U.S. or British citizen, the Washington Post reports. It may affect from which nations the rich want to gain a second passport. One London-based consultancy says clients in South Africa and Asia are looking at Australian passports, while Cyprus and Malta are of growing interest for people seeking quick access to Europe.
Why no mask? Despite announced safety policies, many passengers on flights are not wearing masks—and flight attendants have been told not to confront them, the New York Times reports. Travelers say that on some flights, there are not even announcements about the mask-wearing policy. “Airlines have said follow the guidelines, but don’t enforce them, don’t tackle people to the ground and don’t turn flights around if they don’t listen,” the Times quoted Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants union, as saying. “That gets around to the public, then it’s, ‘I don’t have to do this. There are no consequences if I don’t do this.’ That, too, can lead to conflict, not just with the flight attendants, but with other passengers, who get angry and all of a sudden we have to break up a fight.”
Time out: Steve Fuller had traveled to every country recognized by the United Nations. Except one. The retired Kansas City judge was in Fiji in mid-February, preparing to board his flight to his last destination, Tonga, when he got the bad news. Travel would be delayed, for months it turned out, because of the spread of COVID-19. Fuller is among the roughly 1,400 members of the Travelers’ Century Club, a global organization for people who have ventured to 100 or more countries and territories. Bruce Wallin writes for Nat Geo about the (currently frustrating) world of competitive traveling. | | | |
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