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  • Don't Go There...

    Go Asia
    May 10 2004

    Don't Go There...

    Where to find travel warnings on the Internet


    Don't go there! (Or, at least, I wouldn't go there.) But how do you
    know where there is?

    Well, there are a few good travel advisory sites online to help you
    know in advance that maybe your trip to Tajikistan or Mindanao or
    Papua New Guinea isn't a good idea right now.

    Travel Warnings online at the U.S. State Department's web site is a
    good starting point. They are listed individually by country and
    there are also links to more basic consular information on particular
    countries.

    The sorts of things you find include a warning issued on July 3rd,
    stating that the U.S. Embassy in Nepal "has received credible
    information that Maoist activists have targeted casinos in Nepal for
    attack within the next few days... The Embassy advises American
    citizens in Nepal to exercise caution and avoid visiting casinos for
    the next seven days until the Embassy can better judge the extent and
    scope of the threat." The warning doesn't actually expire until
    August 1st. Personally, I suspect there are more fulfilling things to
    do in Nepal than play blackjack, anyway. If you have to play
    blackjack and you don't want to get blown up, go to Atlantic City...

    Country Advice at the British government's Foreign & Commonwealth
    Office page has a list of countries it advises British citizens not
    to travel in. At the moment they advise against travel to
    Afghanistan, Burundi, the Central African Republic, Iraq, and
    Tajikistan under any circumstance. They also have warnings about
    particular regions of other countries:

    If you are going to Azerbaijan, stay away from the Nagorno-Karabakh
    region.
    Travelers in Indonesia should stay out of Aceh and Maluku provinces.
    Stay out of the northern and eastern portions of Sri Lanka.
    There are 21 such warnings at the moment on the British site. The
    site also allows you to get more detailed information on specific
    countries.

    While it doesn't list warnings on the site's front door, the
    Australian Department of Foreign Affairs has consular information by
    country and includes warnings on hte individual country page.

    One of the better sites available is the Canadian government's Travel
    Information and Advisory Reports page. Click on their "beware" link
    and you receive a list of advisories currently in effect -- 42 at the
    moment. Among them:

    Canadians should not travel to Papua New Guinea until further notice.
    Large-scale civil unrest has occurred in Port Moresby. There have
    been clashes between students and the government. Rioting and looting
    has broken out in several parts of the city. Deaths have been
    reported. Unrest is expected to continue. Transportation has been
    disrupted and businesses are subject to closures.
    That warning was issued on June 29th. The Canadian site is also
    available in French.

    While all of these sites are helpful in assessing the wisdom of
    travel to a particular destination, they deal almost entirely with
    political issues and problems of civil unrest. If you want to know
    about the dengue fever outbreak in Chiang Mai, Thailand, or recent
    problem in Bangladesh with acute neurological syndrome, you'll have
    to go somewhere else to find that information.

    Disease Outbreak News from the World Health Organization is probably
    the best place for finding out about serious epidemics. Among their
    most recent warnings is one about meningococcal disease associated
    with travel to Saudi Arabia. (Meningococcal disease is an acute
    bacterial disease characterized by sudden onset with fever, intense
    headache, nausea and vomiting, stiff neck, and, frequently, a
    petechial rash with pink macules. Fatality rates often exceeded 50%.)


    Over the last year they have reported on:

    Cholera in South Africa and Madagascar
    Yellow Fever in Brazil
    Plague in Zambia
    Ebola virus in Uganda
    Measles in Korea
    Leptospirosis in France and Canada
    Legionnaires' disease in Australia
    Polio in China

    http://goasia.about.com/library/weekly/aa071501a.htm
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