Home GCC Kuwait Kuwait removes most Covid-19 restrictions, resumes all commercial activities Large gatherings continue to be banned, and those not vaccinated will have restricted entry in certain areas by Aarti Nagraj July 27, 2021 Kuwait has announced that all commercial activities will resume without any restrictions starting from Tuesday, July 27. The cabinet on Monday announced that it had cancelled its decision to close commercial activities from 8pm, starting Tuesday. It said that all activities will resume except for gatherings including conferences, weddings, and social events, which will remain banned until further notice. However, while vaccinated people will be allowed access to all areas, those who have not been vaccinated will only be permitted entry into pharmacies, cooperative societies, food and catering markets, government buildings, hospitals and private medical centres, the official Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) reported. Cabinet decides to end commercial shops shutdown at (8:00 local time) starting tomorrow Tuesday #KUNA #KUWAIT — Kuwait News Agency – English Feed (@kuna_en) July 26, 2021 The cabinet also confirmed that all activities for children will resume from September 1. It had closed all children’s summer clubs earlier this month. Read: Kuwait to shut all clubs offering activities for children from July 25 The Kuwaiti cabinet also announced that direct flights to Morocco and Maldives will resume from August 1. The latest cabinet decision comes after Kuwait recorded a significant decrease in the number of new coronavirus cases. On Monday, Kuwait recorded 988 new cases, raising the total number of infections to 393,605. It also reported nine Covid-19 deaths, with the total death toll at 2,293. The Ministry of Health also confirmed that 1,336 patients recovered from the virus, bringing the total recoveries to 377,434. Tags Cabinet Commercial Activities Covid-19 Economy Government Kuwait News Vaccination 0 Comments You might also like Top marks for GCC nations in digital connectivity index Key trade deal brings UAE, Mauritius closer together Bahrain notched up 2.45% growth in third quarter of 2023 Has UK economy entered a recession? Q3 data suggest so