Reuters/Cairo
Saudi Arabia has suspended flights to four countries, including the neighbouring United Arab Emirates, to protect against a coronavirus variant, the interior ministry said Saturday.
The move comes seven weeks after the kingdom permitted fully immunised citizens to travel abroad, after a ban on foreign trips that lasted more than a year.
The UAE, and especially Dubai, is a key leisure destination for Saudis.
Flights to and from the UAE, alongside those to Ethiopia, Afghanistan and Vietnam, will be suspended from Sunday, an interior ministry official said, quoted by the state news agency SPA.
Saudi citizens and residents returning from these countries will be required to quarantine for 14 days, it added.
Citizens would be banned "from travelling directly or indirectly, without obtaining prior permission from... authorities".
The decision was taken due to "the spread of a new mutated strain of the (Covid-19) virus", it added, without explicitly mentioning the increasingly globally emergent Delta variant.
The variant, first detected in India and now present in at least 85 countries, is the most contagious of any Covid-19 variant yet identified.
The UAE announced last week it had recorded cases of the Delta variant and it has suspended flights to and from India.
The ban goes into effect on July 4 and will apply to anyone who has been in those four countries within the last 14 days, it said.
Saudi citizens returning before Sunday will be exempted.
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