Travellers to Samoa will soon pay for their quarantine costs as the government moves to reduce the expense of coronavirus prevention measures that began two years ago.
The Chairman of the National Emergency Operations Committee, Agafili Shem Leo said Cabinet has approved the new plans.
Currently government has been paying for the cost of accommodation, breakfast and lunch in MIQ for passengers.
This has so far cost almost $19 million ($18.74million) tālā since the start of repatriation flights, a cost that also includes cost of security services, transportation and associated costs.
Agafili said the average cost to repatriate and quarantine one person for 21 days is between $3,000 and $5,000 tālā.
Returning scholarship students and patients on the government medical treatment scheme will still be funded by the government.
The Minister of Finance, Mulipola Anarosa Molio'o-Ale, recently noted that despite the substantial cost to the government, the upside to all this is it is stimulating the economy.
She said the money is staying in Samoa through payments for all local services which have an economic effect on hotels and other services which keep people employed.
Agafili said that the government is still in discussions on whether to gradually open borders and that the situation in Fiji is being monitored after they opened borders to tourists and had a spike in Covid-19 cases.
Meanwhile, the government has approved flights for the first three months of 2022 to bring returning citizens home as well as take seasonal workers to New Zealand and Australia.
A total of nine return flights have been approved until March 2022.