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União Europeia estuda banir entrada de viajantes do Brasil, EUA e Rússia por causa da pandemia, diz jornal

Documento obtido pelo ‘The New York Times’ mostra países que terão restrições de viagens para turistas provenientes dos locais mais atingidos pelo novo coronavírus. A União Europeia estuda restringir a entrada de viajantes provenientes do Brasil, dos Estados Unidos e da Rússia, informou reportagem do jornal norte-americano “The New York Times” nesta terça-feira (23). Com a chegada do verão, o bloco europeu pretende iniciar a reabertura das fronteiras externas a partir de 1º de julho, começando por países que têm controlado melhor a pandemia de Covid-19. Oficialmente, ainda não houve anúncio formal sobre quais estados estarão incluídos no banimento. Estados Unidos, Brasil e Rússia são os três países com maior número absoluto de casos do novo coronavírus, segundo a Universidade Johns Hopkins. Na segunda-feira, o mundo registrava mais de 9 milhões de diagnósticos confirmados da virose. De acordo com o “Times”, visitantes de países como China, Uganda, Cuba e Vietnã poderiam entrar nos países da União Europeia após dados mais tranquilizantes sobre o vírus nesses locais. Em março, com o agravamento da epidemia na Europa, o presidente dos Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, baniu viagens da maioria dos países europeus rumo aos EUA — medida semelhante à que o republicano tomou no início da crise da Covid-19, quando proibiu a entrada de visitantes da China. O Brasil também entrou na lista dos países barrados pela Casa Branca em maio. Reportagem em atualização

Este artigo G1 > Turismo e Viagem foi publicado em https://g1.globo.com/mundo/noticia/2020/06/23/uniao-europeia-estuda-banir-entrada-de-viajantes-do-brasil-eua-e-russia-por-causa-da-pandemia-diz-jornal.ghtml



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