UK removes Kenya from COVID-19 red list

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After the United Kingdom placed Kenya on the red list, the country also took steps to reinstate it, which in turn upset the Kenyan authorities.

As of April 09, 2021, all passengers originating or departing from the UK airports will have to be isolated from public places within 14 days and identified in a livelihood.

Once they are in those places, they will have to be tested twice, first after two days, second after eight days and in their own way.

This is according to a statement issued last night by the Kenyan Ministry of Foreign Affairs in response to a recent British takeover of Kenya.

The article puts Kenya on the list of key countries that are not allowed to enter the UK due to concerns about the spread of a new type of coronavirus.

Kenya says the UK article is a sad one, and will have a detrimental effect on the existing relations between the two countries in terms of trade, commodity tourism and security.

The decision by the Kenyan government will take effect on Thursday, April 9, as is the case with the United Kingdom.

In the meantime, they will not take cargo planes, or Kenyans who are already living in the UK or will pass through the UK airports.

In the statement, the Kenyan government said that the UK’s discrimination law applies to certain countries and their citizens, based on the situation and the opinions of experts.

It argues that the United Kingdom would not have considered these “discriminatory and divisive” sanctions, but rather would have agreed to cooperate with each other.

“Kenya continues to believe that by working together to fight this epidemic, the British government must back Kenya by giving it a vaccine … because it already knows that it has more than it needs,” it said.

Kenya is shocked to see the UK take the decision at a time when it is already being praised by other countries and partner organizations, including the United Nations World Health Organization (WHO), for how it has been a success for other countries in the fight against the disease. and its spread.

Kenya is also saddened by the fact that the world’s producers of these vaccines have begun to attract and prevent other countries, indicating that there is a vaccine-based vaccine, the so-called “apartheid vaccine.”

He believes that this journey will increase the existing divisions, and that this will “make the world unable to fight this plague.”

“Countries that make vaccines like the United Kingdom need to know that this virus is not from Africa, that it has no borders, and that you have not been in the public for a long time to determine what the future holds,” it says.

Kenya, as well as countries such as the Philippines, Pakistan and Bangladesh, have been added to about 30 other countries, including Burundi, on the UK list.

In the second month, the Burundian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that the country could return to the UK in the near future, but so far nothing has been announced.

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