
Winnipeg travellers blast new COVID-19 testing requirements
CBC
Ayodele Odeyemi arrived home in Manitoba fully aware of the new restrictions that travellers will soon face.
Odeyemi's flight from Minneapolis touched down at the Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport on Tuesday evening, the final leg of a journey back from Nigeria.
He had two COVID-19 tests on his cross-Atlantic journey, one in Nigeria and another in the U.S.
Odeyemi expects he will have to take another within 24-48 hours after returning to Canada, and he said it's stressful, especially with the emergence of a new variant of concern.
"You're spending more. You're going through a whole lot of rigorous stress all because of this new strain, even while you are double vaxxed. You are fully vaxxed and you're still going to go through it," Odeyemi told CBC.
There are 10 African nations from which the federal government has banned foreign travellers, adding Egypt, Malawi and Nigeria to the list on Tuesday, in the wake of the discovery of the omicron variant, which has surfaced in parts of Canada.
The federal government has also said all travellers arriving in Canada — except from the U.S. — will be required to take a COVID test regardless of vaccination status. This will be followed by a mandatory quarantine period until the result of the test is known.
Odeyemi said Ottawa's announcement has "jeopardized the essence of vacation."
He worries this could lead to a return to highly restricted international travel.
"Those who are not vaccinated are now like, 'Yeah, see we told you.' Now what's the difference between those who are vaxxed and those who are not vaxxed?" he said.
"You can't travel no more. The way things are going, it might go back to mid-2020 and nobody knows what to expect."
He made it back to Canada before the new testing mandate comes into effect but Robert Tapper had to break the news to his wife that she will not be joining him down in Cozumel, Mexico.
The Winnipeg lawyer called the new travel rules "nonsense" and "hideously stupid."
"It is absolutely impermissible to pass a law or legal ordinant that is different for different people across the country," Tapper told CBC from his home in Mexico.