Land Transport Regulatory Commission Director General Salah Lozi said Monday that cross-border transport of goods with Saudi Arabia continued without disruption despite restrictions introduced over concerns of a new COVID-19 strain.
He told Petra in an interview that the freight movement between the two neighbouring Kingdoms had not been impacted by a Saudi decision suspending entry to the country through land crossings, and that transport across the frontier is business as usual.
The emergency Saudi measures, which were taken to protect public health after a more infectious strain of the COVID-19 pandemic emerged in a number of countries, excluded the transport of goods and supply chains from countries where the mutated virus had not appeared, and which were designated so by the Health Ministry in coordination with the Transport Ministry.
Land Transport Regulatory Commission Director General Salah Lozi said Monday that cross-border transport of goods with Saudi Arabia continued without disruption despite restrictions introduced over concerns of a new COVID-19 strain.
He told Petra in an interview that the freight movement between the two neighbouring Kingdoms had not been impacted by a Saudi decision suspending entry to the country through land crossings, and that transport across the frontier is business as usual.
The emergency Saudi measures, which were taken to protect public health after a more infectious strain of the COVID-19 pandemic emerged in a number of countries, excluded the transport of goods and supply chains from countries where the mutated virus had not appeared, and which were designated so by the Health Ministry in coordination with the Transport Ministry.
Land Transport Regulatory Commission Director General Salah Lozi said Monday that cross-border transport of goods with Saudi Arabia continued without disruption despite restrictions introduced over concerns of a new COVID-19 strain.
He told Petra in an interview that the freight movement between the two neighbouring Kingdoms had not been impacted by a Saudi decision suspending entry to the country through land crossings, and that transport across the frontier is business as usual.
The emergency Saudi measures, which were taken to protect public health after a more infectious strain of the COVID-19 pandemic emerged in a number of countries, excluded the transport of goods and supply chains from countries where the mutated virus had not appeared, and which were designated so by the Health Ministry in coordination with the Transport Ministry.
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