Official: Vietnam
to scrap visas for five European countries in July
International
tourists pass an immigration check to enter Thua
Thien-Hue Province,
located in central Vietnam.
Tuoi Tre
Vietnamese Prime Minister signed
Wednesday a directive to waive visa requirements for citizens of five
European countries, starting July 1.
The visa-free travel policy will be
applicable to German, French, British, Italian, and Spanish visitors, with an
allowed 15-day stay for each entry, according to the document.
Vietnam
will waive visas for the five countries for one year from the directive’s
effective date. These countries do not have a similar policy for Vietnamese
citizens, however.
The Southeast Asian country
currently applies a one-sided free-visa policy to eight countries, including Japan, South
Korea, Norway,
Finland, Denmark, Sweden,
Russia, and Belarus.
Vietnam
also has a visa-free policy for nine other Southeast Asian countries,
including Brunei, Myanmar, Cambodia,
Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia,
Thailand, Singapore, and the Philippines.
According to the new directive,
foreign tourists who visit Phu Quoc Island,
off the southern province
of Kien Giang, will not
need to apply for a visa if they stay there for 30 days at most.
This measure will hopefully enable Vietnam
to win back international tourists, at a time when the country’s foreign
tourist arrival numbers have repeatedly slumped for 12 consecutive months.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
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