• An Indian woman wears a mask due to the outbreak of Covid-19 in Bangalore, India. EPA
    An Indian woman wears a mask due to the outbreak of Covid-19 in Bangalore, India. EPA
  • Models present creations during a fashion show, wearing masks as a measure to avoid the spread of the Covid-19, in Seoul, South Korea. Reuters
    Models present creations during a fashion show, wearing masks as a measure to avoid the spread of the Covid-19, in Seoul, South Korea. Reuters
  • A patient looks on as their nasal and throat swabs are put into a test tube, during walk-up Covid-19 testing in a mobile diagnostic tent in San Gregorio Atlapulco in the Xochimilco district of Mexico City. AP Photo
    A patient looks on as their nasal and throat swabs are put into a test tube, during walk-up Covid-19 testing in a mobile diagnostic tent in San Gregorio Atlapulco in the Xochimilco district of Mexico City. AP Photo
  • Salvadoran Rebeca Valle de Barrera, right, and her five children show a picture of her deceased husband Joaquin Barrera who, along with her parents and two other brothers, recently died of Covid-19, at their home in Santiago Nonualco, La Paz department, El Salvador. AFP
    Salvadoran Rebeca Valle de Barrera, right, and her five children show a picture of her deceased husband Joaquin Barrera who, along with her parents and two other brothers, recently died of Covid-19, at their home in Santiago Nonualco, La Paz department, El Salvador. AFP
  • A Covid-19 patient reacts after being tested inside a field hospital built on a football stadium in Machakos, as the number of confirmed Covid-19 cases continues to rise in Kenya. Reuters
    A Covid-19 patient reacts after being tested inside a field hospital built on a football stadium in Machakos, as the number of confirmed Covid-19 cases continues to rise in Kenya. Reuters
  • A man walks past by a mural by artist Cosimo Cheone dedicated to nurses of Sacco hospital, in Milan, Italy. AP Photo
    A man walks past by a mural by artist Cosimo Cheone dedicated to nurses of Sacco hospital, in Milan, Italy. AP Photo
  • A woman carries a baby as she lines up to receive a hot meal from municipal workers at Ciudad Peronia neighborhood in Villa Nueva municipality in Guatemala. AFP
    A woman carries a baby as she lines up to receive a hot meal from municipal workers at Ciudad Peronia neighborhood in Villa Nueva municipality in Guatemala. AFP
  • Teacher Maura Silva, who works for public school Escola Municipal Frei Vicente de Salvador and who created a "hug kit" using plastic covers, embraces her student Yuri Araujo Silva at Yuri's home in the 77 Padre Miguel slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Reuters
    Teacher Maura Silva, who works for public school Escola Municipal Frei Vicente de Salvador and who created a "hug kit" using plastic covers, embraces her student Yuri Araujo Silva at Yuri's home in the 77 Padre Miguel slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Reuters
  • Employees from several maid-themed cafes of Akihabara pray during a prayer-meeting for protection from Covid-19 and for a thriving business at the Kanda Myojin shrine in Tokyo. AP Photo
    Employees from several maid-themed cafes of Akihabara pray during a prayer-meeting for protection from Covid-19 and for a thriving business at the Kanda Myojin shrine in Tokyo. AP Photo
  • A sign informs customers at the Edison Hotel restaurant about wearing a protective face mask during the coronavirus pandemic, along Ocean Drive in Miami Beach, Florida, USA. AP Photo
    A sign informs customers at the Edison Hotel restaurant about wearing a protective face mask during the coronavirus pandemic, along Ocean Drive in Miami Beach, Florida, USA. AP Photo
  • Worshippers socially distanced and wearing face masks kneel on their personal prayer mats during Friday prayers at Madina Masjid, Sheffield's central mosque, in Sheffield, northern England. AFP
    Worshippers socially distanced and wearing face masks kneel on their personal prayer mats during Friday prayers at Madina Masjid, Sheffield's central mosque, in Sheffield, northern England. AFP
  • Visitors listen to the sound installation “eleven songs – halle am berghain” at Berghain club in Berlin, Germany. AFP
    Visitors listen to the sound installation “eleven songs – halle am berghain” at Berghain club in Berlin, Germany. AFP
  • Shopping mall workers wearing masks for protection against the Covid-19 wait for a shuttle outside a mall, in Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines. Reuters
    Shopping mall workers wearing masks for protection against the Covid-19 wait for a shuttle outside a mall, in Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines. Reuters
  • A man wearing a protective face mask walks at Mid-Levels Central, following the Covid-19 outbreak in Hong Kong, China. Reuters
    A man wearing a protective face mask walks at Mid-Levels Central, following the Covid-19 outbreak in Hong Kong, China. Reuters
  • A masked man rides a UFO-shaped toy car at a park in Cali, Colombia before a night curfew starts against the spread of the new coronavirus. AFP
    A masked man rides a UFO-shaped toy car at a park in Cali, Colombia before a night curfew starts against the spread of the new coronavirus. AFP

Coronavirus: Passengers from these 29 countries must be tested twice if travelling to Dubai


Gillian Duncan
  • English
  • Arabic

Related: Full list of where you can be tested overseas before travelling to the Emirates

Dubai will halt blanket testing on arriving passengers next week - instead requiring people from just 29 countries to undergo a nasal swab when they land.

Last week, the federal government said everyone travelling to the country, including Emiratis, residents and tourists, must present a certificate to prove they are free from Covid-19 before they board their flight.

But now Dubai has released a list of countries whose passengers will be required to take a second PCR swab test when they land in the emirate from August 1.

The countries on the list, released by Dubai Airports and Emirates, include several with a high number of daily new cases, such as Russia and Brazil, and nations without recognised testing centres.

They are:

Asia: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

Middle East and Africa: Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Nigeria, Somalia, Sudan, South Africa and Tanzania.

Europe: Armenia, Montenegro, Russia and Serbia.

The Americas: Brazil, the US – Dallas Fort Worth, Houston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Fort Lauderdale and Orlando, including passengers originating from California, Florida and Texas who connect to an Emirates flight from any airport to Dubai.

To date, all passengers landing in Dubai have been tested when they landed at the airport but this will stop on August 1.

In Abu Dhabi and the Northern Emirates, all passengers will continue to be tested on arrival, in addition to carrying proof that they were tested before they boarded their flight.

Anyone who takes a test on arrival must isolate until they receive their results. If the result is negative, they no longer need to isolate, according to Dubai's rules. According to federal rules, travellers must quarantine for 14 days, whatever the test result is, if they are in the other emirates.

Everyone who arrives in the country must download the Covid19 - DXB Smart App if they arrive in Dubai, or Al Hosn app if they land elsewhere in the UAE. The app allows users to receive the results of their test, if they took one on arrival, and allows contact tracing teams to track the spread of the virus.

Last week, federal authorities said any UAE resident travelling to the UK or EU must be tested and show negative for Covid-19 before leaving the Emirates.

Roy Cooper / The National
Roy Cooper / The National