EU narrows down border list, US unlikely to make the cut

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BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union envoys are close to finalizing a list of countries whose citizens will be
allowed to enter Europe again, possibly from late next week, EU diplomats confirmed Saturday. Americans
are almost certain to be excluded in the short term due to the number of U.S. coronavirus cases.
The envoys were expected to have narrowed down later Saturday the exact criteria for countries to make
the list, which include the way the spread of the virus is being managed. Another key condition is
whether the country has a ban on citizens from European nations.
The number of cases in the United States has surged over the past week, with an all-time high of 45,300
confirmed new daily infections just reached. President Donald Trump also suspended the entry of all
people from Europe’s ID check-free travel zone in a decree in March.
The EU diplomats confirmed that an official agreement on the criteria — likely to include a limit on the
infection rate per 100,000 citizens — is expected late on Monday or early Tuesday. The diplomats spoke
on condition of anonymity because the procedure is ongoing and politically very sensitive.
Infection rates are high in Brazil, India and Russia, and it’s unlikely the EU will let their citizens
in, either. The list would be updated every 14 days, with new countries added and some possibly being
left off based on how they manage the spread of the virus.
More than 15 million Americans are estimated to travel to Europe annually, and any delay would be a
further blow to virus-ravaged economies and tourism sectors, both in Europe and the United States.
Around 10 million Europeans are thought to cross the Atlantic for vacations and business each year.
The 27 EU nations and four other countries that are part of Europe’s "Schengen area" — a
26-nation bloc where goods and people move freely without document checks — appear on track to reopen
their borders between each other by July 1.
Once that happens, restrictions on non-essential travel to Europe, which were imposed in March to halt
new virus cases from entering, would gradually be lifted.
On Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo played down concerns that the EU might refuse to allow
Americans in.
"We’ve denied travel to Europe and vice versa. That’s the posture that we all sit in now, and I
think we’re all taking seriously the need to figure out how to get this up," Pompeo said.
"We’ll work to get this right. We want to make sure that it’s health-based, science-based."

"We need to get our global economy back going again," he said.
The European Commission, which monitors the bloc’s laws, believes that "travel restrictions should
not be lifted as regards third countries where the situation is worse" than the average in the 27
EU member countries plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.
The commission insists that it’s not trying to target any country or that the list might be politicized
as tourism-reliant countries around Europe push to get their borders back open again.
"The European Union has an internal process to determine from which countries it would be safe to
accept travelers," spokesman Eric Mamer said Thursday, adding that its decisions are "based on
health criteria."

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