Na faasilasila mai e le pulega a Aikupito o Iulai 1, o le a faʻatagaina tagata femalagaaʻi faavaomalo e asiasi i nofoaga taʻutaʻua o le atunuʻu ae sili atu ona mamao i nofoaga e le o afaina i le Covid-19 le afaina, e pei o le itu i saute o le Penisula o Sinai faatasi ai ma nofoaga tetele o Sharm el Sheikh, o le Sami Ulaula faletalimalo o Hurghada ma Marsa Alam, faatasi ai ma Marsa Matrouh i le talafatai Metitirani.
I le masina na teʻa nei, na faʻatagaina ai e Aikupito faletalimalo e amata faʻatagaina tagata tafafao maimoa a o faigaluega i se tulaga faʻatapulaʻa. Na taʻu atu e le Minisita o mea anamua ma Tagata Tafafao Maimoa o Khaled al-Anani i le AFP i le Aso Lulu e faapea, o le a tatalaina foi i se taimi i le lumanaʻi nofoaga e tafafao ai turisi e pei o Giza pyramids ma le tuugamau o Tutankhamun i Luxor, e talia ai se numera faatapulaa o tagata asiasi i le taimi.
O Aikupito na sili atu i le 39,720 faʻamauina Covid-19 mataupu ma toeititi 1,380 maliu, e tusa ai ma le Iunivesite o Johns Hopkins.
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OA MEA E AVEA MAI LENEI TUSI:
- Antiquities and Tourism Minister Khaled al-Anani told AFP on Wednesday that top tourist attractions such as the Giza pyramids and the tomb of Tutankhamun in Luxor will also open sometime in the future, accepting a limited number of visitors at a time.
- Egyptian authorities announced that July 1, international travelers will be allowed to visit country’s popular but more remote sites in the areas less hit by the COVID-19 outbreak, such as the southern part of the Sinai Peninsula with the major resorts of Sharm el Sheikh, the Red Sea resorts of Hurghada and Marsa Alam, along with Marsa Matrouh on the Mediterranean coast.
- Last month, Egypt allowed hotels to start admitting domestic tourists while working at a limited capacity.