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A holiday to Bonaire is currently no longer possible, since Tuesday evening the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has put the island on code orange. Because the care capacity on this island is limited and the number of infections is increasing, unnecessary trips to this island are discouraged. Bonaire.nu recently reported in a news report that the number of corona infections rose from eleven to thirty-seven last weekend.

On Saturday evening, a slight lockdown from Monday September 21 was announced in an additional press conference on Bonaire. Travelers who travel to this island must be able to show a negative result of a PCR test. The PCR test must be done no more than 72 hours before departure. Travelers who cannot show a negative test result upon arrival in Bonaire must, in accordance with the emergency ordinance of the Public Entity of Bonaire, immediately be quarantined for 14 days at their own expense at a location designated by the Island Governor.

Travelers who want to travel to Bonaire must also complete an online health declaration. Preferably forty-eight hours before departure. Upon arrival in Bonaire travelers must show the printed or a copy of the digital form on your phone to the employees of Public Health. Travelers returning from Bonaire must be in home quarantine for 10 days in the Netherlands. The island of Aruba and St. Maarten have also previously received code orange from us Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The island of Curacao is still accessible to travelers, this island still has code yellow.

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