Ghana Moves to Fine Airlines $3,500 for Unvaccinated Passengers

A man arrives with his luggage at the Kotoka International Airport in Accra, Ghana, on September 2, 2020. - Ghana reopened its international airport on September 1, 2020 but with new regulations in place to curb the spread of the coronavirus, the president announced. Kotoka International Airport, located outside the capital Accra, was closed in March along with other border points in a bid to contain the virus in the west African country. (Photo by Nipah Dennis / AFP) (Photo by NIPAH DENNIS/AFP via Getty Images)

Ghana’s main international airport moves to fine airlines $3,500 for every passenger they fly in who is not vaccinated against COVID-19 or who tests positive for the coronavirus upon arrival

The operator of Ghana Airports said on Monday that the rule comes into effect on Tuesday at Kotoka International Airport in the capital Accra. It follows a health ministry move last week to require all people entering Ghana to be vaccinated.

The measures are some of the strictest in Africa, where vaccine uptake has been challenged by lack of supply and logistical issues even as the new Omicron variant raises concerns about quicker transmission of the virus.

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Ghana’s tightening of restrictions comes as the European Investment Bank announced a 75-million-euro ($85 million) investment loan to support its pandemic response, the largest such support for a COVID-19 programme in Sub-Saharan Africa.

“Ghana has taken significant steps to manage the impact of COVID and to unlock long-term investment,” EIB President Werner Hoyer said in a statement.

The authorities launched a massive vaccination drive this month ahead of the enforcement from Jan. 22 of a vaccine mandate for targeted groups, including government employees, health workers and students. It plans to recruit more health workers to be able to double daily inoculation from 140,000.

Ghana, one of West Africa’s largest economies that runs on exports of cocoa, gold and oil, has so far vaccinated slightly more than 5% of its population of 30 million

The health service has recorded 131,412 infections and 1,239 deaths from COVID-19

COVID-19 cases over the last two weeks have recorded at Kotoka airport accounted for about 60% of total infections in the country, the health service said on Friday

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