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Malta International Airport welcomes recognition of digital documents by health authorities

Malta International Airport welcomes recognition of digital documents by health authorities
Jul 2 2021 Share

The Malta International Airport announced today that they welcome the decision by the health authorities to recognise the digital versions of documents which are required for entry into Malta. This includes the UK digital vaccine certificate and the Malta digital Passenger Locator Form (dPLF) which forms part of a wider EU system. Stating this is an important step in the right direction, it is expected to contribute to a much improved experience for all guests arriving in Malta. 

Despite this, passengers arriving with missing or paper-based documents are still to be expected. This requires manual verification by public health representatives. The airport would like to appeal in this light to prospective travellers for their cooperation by presenting and submitting required entry documents digitally whenever possible. The Malta International Airport also reminds departing and arriving passengers of the country-specific requirements which can all be found on the airport’s COVID-19 page. 

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Photo Source: Malta International Airport

77% of businesses report finding workers troublesome

77% of businesses report finding workers troublesome
Jul 2 2021 Share

A new report published by the Malta Chamber has revealed that 77% of businesses responding to a survey have trouble finding workers at various levels. Dealing with CEO confidence levels, the report represents a comparison of data from 199 respondents from the local business community during June. This survey took place before Malta’s grey-listing. 

Employee retention has allegedly decreased for 18% of businesses, but ‘more significantly, 77% report trouble finding workers at a variety of levels.’ This is impacting a businesses’ ability to meet customer demand. 61% of leaders show that challenges ‘hiring are limiting the ability of their company to operate at full capacity.’ 

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When asked whether they expect their firm’s total number of employees to increase during the upcoming 12 months, 40% responded yes and 51% stated they would remain at the same level. 9% said they expect them to decrease. 32% of respondents believe that the overall economic conditions in Malta, whereas 40% believe it remained the same and around 26% stating it improved. 

The responses were all gathered before the FATF’s decision to grey list Malta and it is therefore unsure whether opinions remain the same. 

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Photo Source: fauxels

Better monitoring of Euro 2020 spectators called for by WHO Europe

Better monitoring of Euro 2020 spectators called for by WHO Europe
Jul 2 2021 Share

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has stated that the cities hosting Euro 2020 football matches need to monitor the movement of spectators better. The tracking needs to be done before the match, during and after they leave the stadium. Senior Emergency Officer at WHO’s European Office Catherine Smallwood stated that there should be better monitoring beyond the stadia themselves. Despite fears of rising cases in London and St. Petersburg, the British capital is set to host the semi-finals and finals of the tournament next week. 

When asked about whether the Euro championship was a super spreader of the virus, WHO regional director for Europe Hans Kluge stated that despite hoping this to not be the case, it cannot be excluded. Hundreds of cases have been detected among spectators, including Scots returning from London, Finns returning from St. Petersburg and even Delta variant carriers in Copenhagen. 

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Photo Source: Sky Sports

6 COVID-19 cases registered with 0 recoveries

Jul 2 2021 Share

Malta has registered 6 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours from 2,717 swab tests, while 0 patients have recovered. No deaths were registered in the past 24 hours. This information was announced by the official Facebook page of Malta’s Ministry for Health.

As of Friday 2nd July 2021, 675,014 vaccine doses were administered of which 360,364 were 1st doses. 328,960 people are currently fully vaccinated. 

To date, Malta has registered 30,633 COVID-19 cases in total, of which: 30,161 have recovered, 420 died and 52 are still active.

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