Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Good to be back': Hugs and tears as Tonga reopens borders

EUR -
AED 4.306958
AFN 75.646812
ALL 95.403289
AMD 432.28087
ANG 2.099103
AOA 1076.592737
ARS 1636.690307
AUD 1.626912
AWG 2.110966
AZN 1.988641
BAM 1.952552
BBD 2.366064
BDT 144.140212
BGN 1.956282
BHD 0.443685
BIF 3496.398396
BMD 1.172759
BND 1.487232
BOB 8.117496
BRL 5.796832
BSD 1.174746
BTN 110.726798
BWP 15.729637
BYN 3.319877
BYR 22986.077003
BZD 2.36267
CAD 1.6024
CDF 2716.109729
CHF 0.914872
CLF 0.02655
CLP 1044.939808
CNY 7.976931
CNH 7.983815
COP 4385.215751
CRC 538.931022
CUC 1.172759
CUP 31.078114
CVE 110.081871
CZK 24.309295
DJF 209.191994
DKK 7.472702
DOP 69.867345
DZD 154.900352
EGP 61.834187
ERN 17.591385
ETB 183.438322
FJD 2.567406
FKP 0.862531
GBP 0.865085
GEL 3.143132
GGP 0.862531
GHS 13.216014
GIP 0.862531
GMD 85.610725
GNF 10310.37544
GTQ 8.970078
GYD 245.781125
HKD 9.186046
HNL 31.207635
HRK 7.530523
HTG 153.864691
HUF 357.234311
IDR 20343.616355
ILS 3.40259
IMP 0.862531
INR 110.813888
IQD 1536.31433
IRR 1539715.33164
ISK 143.768195
JEP 0.862531
JMD 185.041637
JOD 0.831509
JPY 183.990661
KES 151.660983
KGS 102.523179
KHR 4712.181037
KMF 491.385736
KPW 1055.495919
KRW 1708.111579
KWD 0.361151
KYD 0.978971
KZT 544.034959
LAK 25780.112922
LBP 105199.592888
LKR 378.280703
LRD 215.571381
LSL 19.198146
LTL 3.462853
LVL 0.70939
LYD 7.430639
MAD 10.721954
MDL 20.211377
MGA 4878.134444
MKD 61.635489
MMK 2462.608019
MNT 4198.999511
MOP 9.475437
MRU 47.00421
MUR 54.791685
MVR 18.125013
MWK 2042.946093
MXN 20.300108
MYR 4.585732
MZN 74.937715
NAD 19.198337
NGN 1594.846267
NIO 43.046117
NOK 10.890596
NPR 177.172325
NZD 1.97319
OMR 0.450925
PAB 1.174746
PEN 4.054815
PGK 5.112756
PHP 71.362075
PKR 327.333704
PLN 4.233015
PYG 7190.038852
QAR 4.272376
RON 5.262758
RSD 117.373283
RUB 87.552578
RWF 1722.322908
SAR 4.427513
SBD 9.419903
SCR 16.322273
SDG 704.240694
SEK 10.856852
SGD 1.487762
SHP 0.875583
SLE 28.849265
SLL 24592.165999
SOS 670.234383
SRD 43.897533
STD 24273.744145
STN 24.46056
SVC 10.2789
SYP 129.646523
SZL 19.198277
THB 37.868544
TJS 10.978137
TMT 4.116384
TND 3.365231
TOP 2.823722
TRY 53.184585
TTD 7.94678
TWD 36.840461
TZS 3048.012313
UAH 51.443153
UGX 4393.690778
USD 1.172759
UYU 46.971859
UZS 14235.318521
VES 581.933656
VND 30855.290099
VUV 138.495454
WST 3.179951
XAF 654.901031
XAG 0.014959
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.16944
XCG 2.117178
XDR 0.814487
XOF 654.867581
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.825462
ZAR 19.301245
ZMK 10556.231807
ZMW 22.378771
ZWL 377.627929
  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.97

    -0.17%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.15

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    17.45

    -0.29%

  • BCC

    -1.4800

    72.76

    -2.03%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.42

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.5

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    -1.9400

    85.91

    -2.26%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    24.57

    +1.38%

  • RIO

    -2.4000

    103.11

    -2.33%

  • RELX

    -1.5900

    34.16

    -4.65%

  • AZN

    -2.4000

    182.52

    -1.31%

  • VOD

    -0.4400

    15.69

    -2.8%

  • BTI

    -1.4800

    58.08

    -2.55%

  • BP

    -0.8200

    43.81

    -1.87%

'Good to be back': Hugs and tears as Tonga reopens borders
'Good to be back': Hugs and tears as Tonga reopens borders / Photo: Linny Folau - Matangi Tonga/AFP

'Good to be back': Hugs and tears as Tonga reopens borders

Families embraced and cried tears of joy Monday as they reunited at Tonga's airport -- the inaugural arrivals to the Pacific nation after it lifted Covid restrictions for the first time since the pandemic struck.

Text size:

After Tonga shut its borders in March 2020, the government had tightly controlled a select list of people who were approved to fly into the kingdom -- leaving over 3,000 Tongans stuck overseas.

But with restrictions lifted, Monday's first batch of tourists and returning Tongans -- greeted with colourful garlands and serenaded by a band at the Fua'amotu International Airport -- will not have to undergo quarantine.

The first plane to land was an Air New Zealand flight from Auckland carrying around 200 passengers.

"It's good to be back," said 'Etu Palu, eager to see family again with his mother Finau Palu, who said it was "good to visit the motherland!"

Another passenger, Siosaia Filikitonga, said this was his first visit to Tonga in more than two years because of the pandemic.

"I am happy and emotional. Once Tonga announced the border re-opening, I booked to come," Filikitonga told AFP.

Amid the reunions, Sione Moala Mafi, CEO of Tonga's Ministry of Tourism, said the visitors bring an important boost to the Pacific Kingdom's economy.

"I'm so glad that the border's open and that facilitates the travel between Tonga and the outside world, especially, New Zealand," he said.

"I can see there are a lot of foreign visitors are arriving on the flight as well as Tongans."

More flights, one from New Zealand and one from Australia, are expected later this week with planes from Fiji also due Tuesday and Saturday.

"We are happy to welcome them," Moala Mafi added.

- No super yachts -

Despite its reopening, Tonga is taking a cautious staged approach by limiting the number of incoming flights this month under a framework announced by the Prime Minister's Office on July 22.

They will review the number of flights and cruise ships for September and October, and all incoming passengers must be vaccinated and have negative COVID-19 tests before departure and three to five days after arrival.

Currently the government's National Emergency Management Committee has set the current level to "orange", but Moala Mafi said it looks like "we are progressing towards" going "green".

"Orange now and it has to be reviewed at the end of this month," he said.

So far, yachts and super yachts are not included in the border re-opening, much to the frustration of tourism operators, who say July, with its fantastic weather, is the peak season in Tonga.

"I've got 20 boats sitting in Tahiti that want to come to Tonga. Big boats, I'm not talking about little yachts, because they won't let the yachts come back in here and I don't know why," said David Hunt, owner of Super Yacht Services Tonga.

He was waiting at the airport to meet a yacht owner who had not seen his yacht moored in Vava'u -- one of Tonga's islands -- for over three years.

"Before the pandemic, we were averaging about 30 to 35 yachts a year between operators, but it could be much more this year," he said.

"They've got all these boats coming down to the Pacific they don't want to be in Ukraine, in the Mediterranean."

Moala Mafi said the government is still undecided on yachts in Tongan waters.

"We are still finalising the policy framework for the cruise ships," he said. "We don't forget them, but they are in the pipeline."

Ch.Siegenthaler--NZN