Tag Archives: quarantinefree

Singapore to suspend new ticket sales for quarantine-free travel

Travellers check in for the flight at the Singapore Airlines counter in the departure hall at Changi International Airport in Singapore on December 2, 2021.

Roslan Rahman | AFP | Getty Images

Singapore will freeze new ticket sales for quarantine-free travel in an effort to limit exposure to imported omicron cases, the health ministry said in a statement Wednesday.

The suspension, which begins Thursday and runs through Jan. 20, applies to flights and buses into the city-state.

Travelers who have already booked tickets under Singapore’s vaccinated travel lane arrangements will still be able to enter the country without serving quarantines.

“Our border measures will help to buy us time to study and understand the Omicron variant, and to strengthen our defences, including enhancing our healthcare capacity, and getting more people vaccinated and boosted,” the health ministry said.

Singapore has so far detected 65 imported omicron cases. As of Monday, there were six local omicron cases in the country, the health ministry said.

After Jan. 20, the number of people allowed to visit Singapore without serving quarantines will be temporarily reduced, according to the press release.

The health ministry said the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore and the Ministry of Trade and Industry will provide more details on vaccinated travel lanes via air and land, respectively.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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Latest news updates: Hong Kong leader defends Jamie Dimon’s quarantine-free entry

Hong Kong’s leader on Tuesday defended granting an exemption for JPMorgan Chase chair and chief executive Jamie Dimon, who entered the city without undergoing the stringent three weeks of quarantine, saying the risks were “totally controllable”.

Dimon, the first Wall Street investment bank chief to visit the Chinese territory since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, flew in from the US and will spend just 32 hours in Hong Kong meeting regulators and 4,000 staff in a virtual “town hall”.

“[Dimon’s] case . . . was based on the interests of [Hong Kong’s] economic development,” Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s chief executive, told reporters. “[JPMorgan] is after all a huge bank which has important businesses in Hong Kong.”

She said that Dimon’s trip posed only “controllable risks” given that his itinerary was approved “with restrictions”. Those curbs included wearing a face mask, maintaining distance during meetings and not shaking hands.

Travellers from the US, along with 24 other high-risk countries, including much of Europe, must undergo hotel quarantine for 21 days. Actress Nicole Kidman’s quarantine exemption granted in August to make an Amazon television series sparked a public outcry over “special treatment”.

About 130 Cathay Pacific cargo pilots have been sent to 21 days of quarantine after three of their colleagues tested positive for coronavirus © Bloomberg

While the Hong Kong government had allowed a small number of business executives to skip mandatory quarantine based on economic development concerns, officials had scrapped most exemptions from last week in a bid to meet Beijing’s expectations in facilitating the reopening of borders with mainland China.

Hong Kong has granted 93 quarantine waivers for senior business executives out of 399 applications received as of November 11, according to government figures provided to the Financial Times.

A number of Dimon’s counterparts at large international banks have undergone quarantine in the city, including HSBC chairman Mark Tucker and chief executive Noel Quinn. Standard Chartered chief executive Bill Winters was granted a limited exemption from quarantine this summer that meant he was allowed out for some business meetings.

Others have avoided coming to the city altogether. David Solomon, chief executive of Goldman Sachs, will this week arrive in Singapore — which has ended its quarantine requirements for travellers from the US — in his first trip to Asia since the start of the crisis.

Lam, the city leader, also said on Tuesday that about 130 Cathay Pacific cargo pilots had been sent to 21 days of quarantine after three of their colleagues who stayed at the same hotel in Frankfurt tested positive for coronavirus.

She acknowledged that the move could “greatly affect” the city’s cargo logistics. The airline, after discussions with officials, has imposed stricter quarantine measures for all aircrew to self-isolate for three days and avoid gatherings upon arrival.

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Singapore expands quarantine-free travel, eyes COVID-19 ‘new normal’

People eat at a hawker centre during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Singapore September 21, 2021. REUTERS/Edgar Su

SINGAPORE, Oct 9 (Reuters) – Singapore is opening its borders to more countries for quarantine-free travel as the city-state seeks to rebuild its status as an international aviation hub, and prepares to reach a “new normal” to live with COVID-19.

From Oct. 19 fully vaccinated people from eight countries, including Britain, France, Spain and the United States, will be able to enter the island without quarantining if they pass their COVID-19 tests, the government said on Saturday.

The announcement marks a major step in Singapore’s strategy to resume international links.

The Southeast Asian nation, one of the world’s biggest travel and finance hubs, is home to Asian headquarters of thousands of global companies whose executives have long relied on Singapore’s connectivity.

The country of 5.45 million people has been reporting record daily COVID-19 infections of more than 3,000 over the past few days, though almost all the cases are asymptomatic or mild. About 83% of the population is fully vaccinated, one of the world’s highest rates.

Singapore recently reimposed coronavirus restrictions to buy time to prepare to live with the disease but the step was met with some rare frustration as the government walks a fine line between reopening and preventing hospitals from getting overwhelmed.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said Singapore will reach a new normal and can lighten restrictions when cases stabilise, even if they stay in the hundreds.

“It will take us at least three months, and perhaps as long as six months, to get there,” Lee said in an address to the nation, which has largely kept the virus at bay since last year with masks, contact tracing and a closed border.

“After this surge stabilises, we may still see future surges, especially if new variants emerge. We may have to tap on the brakes again if cases again grow too fast, to protect our healthcare system and healthcare workers,” Lee said.

The government will tighten rules for those who remain unvaccinated from Wednesday, barring them from entering malls and eating at the country’s ubiquitous hawker centres. It will review some COVID-19 curbs in a week or two.

Singapore’s travel programme for fully vaccinated people began in September with Germany and Brunei, and will include South Korea from next month. read more

Up to 3,000 travellers will able to enter daily through the vaccinated travel lanes, a far cry from the record 19.1 million travellers to the city-state in 2019. Borders remain largely closed to key Asian countries.

Singapore is discussing two-way quarantine-free travel with several more countries, the government said.

“We hope this further easing of measures and expansion of Singapore’s border reopening will spur other markets to similarly navigate their pathways towards restarting air travel,” said Philip Goh, Asia-Pacific vice president for the International Air Transport Association.

Singapore Airlines (SIAL.SI) said in a statement that it will expand its vaccinated travel lane networks to 14 cities.

The flagship carrier, which relies solely on international travel, lost a record S$4.27 billion ($3.15 billion) in the year to March, its second year in the red.

Singapore’s Changi airport was among the world’s busiest in 2019, with more than 68 million passengers, before travel crashed last year due to the pandemic.

“Since the Singapore economy is extremely dependent on external demand for our goods and services, very simply put, any moves that help to lift the number of flights handled by Changi Airport will add to our GDP,” said Song Seng Wun, an economist at CIMB Private Banking.

The country has hit some hiccups on its transition to an endemic COVID-19 as the population was focussed on avoiding it for nearly two years. Its leader said the high vaccination coverage meant people will be better protected from the virus, which is likely to infect nearly everyone.

“Let us go about our daily activities as normally as possible, taking necessary precautions,” Lee said. “We should respect COVID-19, but we must not be paralysed by fear.

($1 = 1.3551 Singapore dollars)

Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan and Anshuman Daga in Singapore; Editing by William Mallard

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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IATA app could restart quarantine-free, international flights

People wait for passengers at one of the International Arrivals halls at London Heathrow Airport in west London on February 14, 2021

JUSTIN TALLIS | AFP | Getty Images

A new app, set to launch within weeks, could mark the first step in resuming quarantine-free international travel.

The International Air Travel Association (IATA) travel app will allow governments and airlines to digitally collect, access and share information on the status of individual passengers’ Covid-19 test and vaccination.

The industry body, of which 290 airlines are members, said the tool will bring greater “efficiency” to health documentation checks, while speeding up the recovery of the hard-hit travel sector.

“It’s really about digitizing an existing process,” Nick Careen, IATA’s senior vice president for airport passenger cargo and security, told CNBC Wednesday.

If we do manual processing, we will come to a grinding halt the minute we begin to see a restart.

Nick Careen

senior vice president (APCS), IATA

“This is the way forward, because if we do manual processing, we will come to a grinding halt the minute we begin to see a restart,” he said.

Singapore Airlines will be the first carrier to pilot the tool on an end-to-end London Heathrow route. Thirty other airlines, including Air New Zealand, as well as Emirates and Etihad in the UAE, are set to conduct trials through March and April.

IATA is not alone in developing so-called digital health passports intended to restart cross-border travel. International agencies, governments and tech companies are all also pitching in. But Careen said he hopes the app will establish a “minimum set of requirements” to allow for greater interoperability.

“Eventually you’ll see multiple people in this space,” he said, “but we’re setting the baseline in terms of what the standard needs to be.”

With the new app and continued vaccine rollouts, the global airline association estimates that travel could reach around 50% of 2019 levels by the end of this year.

Analysts had previously expected a greater pick up in travel in early 2021, but the continued spread of the virus and the emergence of new strains have pushed back those expectations.

“That’s the current economic forecast,” said Careen. “There’s a lot of variables that play into that.”

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