AILEEN TORRES-BENNETT/AFP/Getty Images
Fiji: Following a successful nationwide vaccine rollout, Fiji reopened on December 1.
AURA Skypool Lounge
Dubai: Set at a height of 200 meters, the new Aura Skypool is the world's first and highest 360-degree infinity pool.
Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images
Egypt: On November 25, Egypt celebrated the reopening of the 3,400-year-old Avenue of the Sphinxes in a lavish ceremony.
Jan Hetfleisch/Getty Images
Austria: The Alpine nation went back into national lockdown on November 22. Innsbruck is pictured.
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The United States: On November 8, the United States opened its borders to vaccinated international travelers. New York City, seen here, is a top destination for incoming visitors.
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Uruguay: Uruguay has been closed to everyone but citizens and residents since the start of the pandemic, but reopened to vaccinated travelers on November 1. The peninsula of Punta Ballena, in the southeast, is pictured.
Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images
Melbourne, Australia: Thanks to a high vaccination total, the state of Victoria reopened its borders on November 1.
Paul Lakatos/SOPA Images/Sipa USA/AP
Patong Beach, Thailand: The popular southeast Asian country is now allowing quarantine-free travel for vaccinated travelers from more than 40 countries.
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Cambodia: Cambodia has announced plans to reopen Siem Reap and the Angkor Wat temple complex to foreign visitors in January 2022.
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Valparaiso: This artistic city full of colorful murals opened along with the rest of Chile on October 1.
Haitham Al-Shukairi/AFP/Getty Images
Oman: The sultanate reopened its borders on September 1, meaning travelers can now visit the forts, castles and mosques on offer.
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New York City: Amid a thrashing from Hurricane Ida, New York City's Broadway theaters reopened on September 2. Here, the cast of Tony-winning musical "Hadestown" take a curtain call.
Peter Power/The Canadian Press/AP
Canada: Canada -- including Niagara Falls -- reopened its border to the US in August for people who are fully vaccinated.
Olga Rodriguez/AP
San Francisco, California: San Francisco's famous cable cars returned to service in August. The city has a vaccination requirement for indoor public spaces.
Amr Nabil/AP
Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia -- home to the Kaaba in the Muslim holy city of Mecca -- opened to international tourists on August 1.
Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images
Italy: A woman stands in a lavender field in June 2021 in Sale San Giovanni, northwest Italy. Find out about current travel restrictions and the Covid situation in our Italy guide.
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
Washington DC: The Washington Monument, a memorial to George Washington, first President of the United States, reopened to the public in July.
Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images
Venice: In July, the Italian city of Venice once again moved to ban cruise ships from the city center.
Courtesy Sri Lanka Tourism
Sri Lanka: If you think your current workmates are catty, check out this guy. Sri Lanka has a new remote working visa aimed at digital nomads.
Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Celebrity Edge: On June 26, the Celebrity Edge cruise ship took off from Fort Lauderdale in the first revenue-earning US cruise since the pandemic began.
Courtesy Wildflower
Indoor dining: Eating indoors is permitted in the UK, including at Wildflower, a new fine dining restaurant in a shipping container in Camden, London. It first opened in March 2020, weeks before lockdown.
CNN  — 

Since March 2020, would-be travelers have experienced more turbulence on the ground than in the air. As always, though, CNN Travel are your attendants on hand to guide you through the safety instructions and point our your nearest exits.

Here’s our latest roundup of new developments in pandemic travel. Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy week.

The airline says the move is part of a two-pronged approach to improving safety on board, both in terms of Covid-19 spread and curbing unruly passenger behavior. On Thursday, the US Federal Aviation Authority proposed more than $500,000 in new fines against rule-breaking travelers.

1. Bahamas, Sint Maarten and more have been added to US ‘do not travel’ list

Andre Seale/VWPCS/AP
The CDC now advises Americans to not plan Bahamas vacations.

The Bahamas and Morocco are now among the highest-risk destinations for travelers, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s regularly revised travel advisories list.

They moved to the top tier on August 23, along with Sint Maarten, Haiti, Kosovo and Lebanon. The recommendation for these destinations is to avoid all nonessential travel.

2. Seven new destinations have been added to the UK’s ‘green list’

Peter Power/The Canadian Press/AP
Canada, including Niagara Falls, has been added to the UK's "green list."

Canada, Denmark, Finland, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Lithuania and the Azores are all new additions to the UK’s travel “green list.” This means that UK visitors who want to go there have to take a pre-departure test, as well as a PCR test on or before day two of their arrival back in the UK. They don’t need to quarantine.

Thailand and Montenegro have moved to the UK’s “do not travel” red list.

3. Denmark will lift all Covid restrictions on September 10

Kengo Kuma & Associates, mir.no
A Hans Christian Andersen museum opened in his hometown of Odense, Denmark, in June 2021.

Denmark is in the top 10 of the world’s most vaccinated countries, and it’s marking this pandemic success by lifting all of its remaining Covid restrictions on September 10.

Minister of Health Magnus Heunicke said in a statement Friday that “even though we are in a good place right now (…) the government will not hesitate to act quickly if the pandemic again threatens important functions in our society.”

4. Hawaii is asking tourists to stay away

Marco Garcia/AP
Hawaii Governor David Ige speaking at a news conference in 2020.

Hawaii Governor David Ige asked tourists Monday to voluntarily stay away from the state – but stopped short of introducing fresh restrictions on out-of-state visitors.

Covid cases are at a record high, with close to 5,000 new cases reported in the past week.

“We know that it is not a good time to travel to the islands,” said Ige. “The visitors who choose to come to the islands will not have the typical kind of holiday that they expect to get when they visit.”

5. Venice is employing armed guards to deal with crowded ferries

Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images
Canalside houses on Burano island in Venice Lagoon.

The tourists have returned to Venice, with up to 80,000 visitors a day pouring into the city of 50,000 inhabitants, according to local media.

The long lines – and tensions in them – have become such an issue that this summer, armed guards have been brought in to control the crowds, CNN’s Julia Buckley reports.

6. Unruly passengers are risking flight safety

US federal authorities are warning passengers that the rising number of violent outbursts on commercial flights are not only a problem for flight attendants, but they also distract pilots from keeping the entire flight safe.

A Federal Aviation Administration public service announcement video released Tuesday, and first to CNN, shows actual recordings of flight crews informing air traffic controllers of emergency situations in the passenger cabin, interspersed with audio of in-flight altercations.

7. A European international airport is now the world’s busiest

01:32 - Source: CNN
Suitcase's amazing journey after check-in

UK-based travel data provider OAG has been crunching the numbers and announced that Amsterdam (AMS) has moved into first place as the world’s busiest international airport, knocking Dubai (DXB) down into second.

New York JFK-London – named in 2019 as “the world’s only billion-dollar air route” because of its revenue-generating capacity – has returned this month to once again place on OAG’s Top 10 Busiest International Routes.

However, it’s still far from back to its pre-pandemic clout: While the UK is now accepting fully vaccinated inbound travelers from the US, the UK is still in the highest-risk category on the US travel advisories list.

8. Air Canada is mandating Covid-19 vaccines for staff

Steve Russell/The Toronto Star/Getty Images
Toronto's Pearson International Airport pictured in August 2020.

Air Canada has joined fellow North American airline United in introducing a vaccine mandate for its workers. All the Canadian airline’s employees and new hires will be required to be vaccinated and to report their vaccination status as of October 30.

Other US major airlines including Delta, American and Southwest have stopped short of introducing a mandate, but are strongly recommending their workers get vaccinated, and Delta will be raising insurance premiums and limiting sick pay for the unvaccinated.

9. Iceland has had no Covid deaths since May

02:34 - Source: CNN
Iceland has had 0 deaths from Covid-19 since May. Here's why

Iceland is fourth in the world – just behind Malta, Singapore and the UAE – when it comes to the percentage of its population that’s vaccinated.

While infections have surged in the country’s latest Covid-19 wave, there have been fewer hospitalizations compared to 2020 and no coronavirus deaths since May.

10. Disney Cruise Line has issued a vaccine mandate for sailings to the Bahamas

The Bahamas has joined the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s “Level 4: Covid-19 Very High” travel risk list – and while Disney Cruise Line is still running sailings there, from September 3 all passengers 12 and older will have to be fully vaccinated.

Guests who choose not to provide proof of vaccination won’t be permitted to board the ship, according to the cruise line. The mandate will be effective until at least November 1.

CNN’s Julia Buckley, Gregory Wallace, Eric Levenson, Pete Muntean, Rebekah Riess, Kristen Rogers, Andy Rose, Francesca Street and Gary Tuchman contributed to this story.