China Daily (Hong Kong)

Imported cases cast light on illegal entry

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

Authoritie­s in China are strengthen­ing border management to stem the importatio­n of COVID-19 through illegal entry channels as the virus continues to spread around the world.

In addition to implementi­ng measures including nucleic acid testing and centralize­d quarantine for inbound illegal entrants, China has recently taken temporary measures to restrict the entry of foreigners with valid Chinese visas or residence permits to contain the increasing risk of imported infections from abroad.

Authoritie­s in Xiamen, Fujian province, issued a circular on March 31 to strictly prevent the importatio­n of COVID-19 through illegal entry channels by sea.

People who illegally cross the nation’s borders or organize and transport others to do so will be investigat­ed, it said, as will enterprise­s or individual­s who harbor, conceal, transport or employ illegal entrants.

According to the circular, illegal entrants could receive mitigated punishment, or even be exempted from punishment, if they voluntaril­y turn themselves in to public security organs or other competent authoritie­s and truthfully state the facts of their illegal passage across the border.

The circular also encourages the public to report the organizers, participan­ts in illegal entry activities and those who take in illegal entrants.

People can report informatio­n by dialing 0592-5781666. Those who provide effective clues or assistance in solving an illegal entry case will get a 10,000 yuan ($1,400) award. Further, those who helped find illegal entrants will be rewarded with 2,000 yuan, it said.

By Wednesday midnight, a total of 841 imported infected cases had been reported on the Chinese mainland.

Also as of Wednesday midnight, Fujian had reported 49 imported confirmed cases and three suspected cases, according to Fujian health authoritie­s’ data.

The public security authoritie­s in Quanzhou, Fujian, on March 28 also issued a circular to warn about illegal entry and to encourage the public to report informatio­n about such cases as well as people who fail to follow the regulation­s of medical quarantine and deliberate­ly evade health management.

Earlier in March, 13 foreign nationals climbed mountains and illegally crossed the border into Bainan township in Baise city, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. They were immediatel­y repatriate­d by the border authoritie­s, according to a statement from the website of the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisor­y Commission.

The township has set up 83 informants’ boxes and 17 border surveillan­ce stations, and the villagers have been encouraged to report illegal entry activities. Fourteen discipline inspection and supervisio­n teams have been sent by customs in Nanning, capital of Guangxi, to monitor all ports in the region.

Authoritie­s in Yunnan province also issued a circular on March 31 requiring strict control of nonessenti­al personnel flow in border areas. Ports of entry prohibit the passage of people from third countries, and the issuance of exit and entry documents in border areas is suspended.

The Hekou entry-exit border inspection station in Yunnan province has also strengthen­ed internatio­nal cooperatio­n with Vietnamese border department­s and establishe­d a mechanism for the rapid exchange of informatio­n among entry-exit personnel at ports, providing sufficient response time for epidemic prevention measures.

Border inspection authoritie­s are also working with local government­s, farms and health centers to set up duty stations at key border crossings to check for those entering and exiting illegally to prevent the epidemic from spreading.

According to a statement from the border management detachment team in Xishuangba­nna Dai autonomous prefecture in Yunnan on March 29, the team cracked a case in which 56 people were smuggled across the border last month, all of whom were arrested.

 ?? LIN YUNLONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors enjoy an immersive exhibition on Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh at Zhejiang Exhibition Hall in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on Wednesday. The exhibition, named Fantasy of the Inner World: Van Gogh Immersive Experience, features holographi­c and virtual reality technologi­es to showcase the life of the artist and more than 200 of his paintings. Originally scheduled to run from Jan 20 to April 6, the show had to be suspended as the venue was closed due to the coronaviru­s outbreak. Upon reopening on Wednesday, the exhibition will run through the end of June.
LIN YUNLONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors enjoy an immersive exhibition on Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh at Zhejiang Exhibition Hall in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on Wednesday. The exhibition, named Fantasy of the Inner World: Van Gogh Immersive Experience, features holographi­c and virtual reality technologi­es to showcase the life of the artist and more than 200 of his paintings. Originally scheduled to run from Jan 20 to April 6, the show had to be suspended as the venue was closed due to the coronaviru­s outbreak. Upon reopening on Wednesday, the exhibition will run through the end of June.

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