India reopened to fully vaccinated foreign tourists traveling on chartered flights on Friday in the latest easing of its coronavirus restrictions as infection numbers decline. Starting Friday, the country will grant tourist visas to travelers arriving on chartered flights. The facility will be extended to those arriving on commercial flights from Nov. 15. Foreign tourists who land in India on Friday will be the first to come into the country in 19 months. It is the first time India has allowed foreign tourists to enter the country since March 2020 when it imposed its first nationwide coronavirus lockdown. No tourist visas have been issued since March 2020 when Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government shut the country's borders to rein in the coronavirus pandemic. In the past few months though, some visas for diplomats and foreign business officials have been reinstated. The decision to allow foreign tourists, announced earlier this month, comes at a time when India's daily COVID cases have been falling. The country has been recording about 20,000 daily positive infections — down from a peak of 400,000 daily cases during a devastating second wave that swept India in April and May. India has administered more than 970 million vaccine doses. Nearly 70% of the eligible adult population has had at least one dose. The easing of restrictions on foreign travel also coincides with the onset of India's peak travel season, sparking hopes of revival of the beleaguered tourism industry. It also coincides with India's domestic tourist and festive season. With its rich geography and history, India offers a large number of tourist attractions such as the Taj Mahal monument, temples and forts, the snowy mountain peaks of the Himalayas and the white sandy beaches in the west and south. According to government data, India attracted just 2.74 million foreign tourists last year — down from 10.93 million in 2019 — as the pandemic upended lives and businesses. Tourism contributes almost 7% to India's GDP and is also responsible for millions of jobs in the hospitality sector. With the economy struggling like never before, India cannot afford to lose out on the precious foreign exchange that tourism brings. Under the new guidelines, all tourist visas issued before 1Oct. 15 will be invalid. This means that travelers coming to India will have to get fresh visas. "All due protocols and norms relating to COVID-19 as notified by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare from time to time, shall be adhered to by the foreign tourists, carriers bringing them into India and all other stakeholders at landing stations," the government said in an official release. However, the authorities are yet to spell out the testing, vaccination, and quarantine rules for travelers. — Agencies