Fiji Sun

Singapore Might Open Doors to Tourists to Revive Nearly ‘Incapacita­ted’ Changi Airport

- The Print

Singapore could consider opening its borders to tourists in an effort to attract more traffic into its once-bustling airport.

The city state could unilateral­ly allow passengers from certain countries or regions that have kept virus cases at similar or lower levels than Singapore, Ong Ye Kung, the newly appointed Transport Minister, said last Friday in a speech to his staff, without naming any nations.

A 14-day quarantine is a “major deterrent” to travellers and the country may have to consider replacing it with a rigorous testing regime, he said.

“Health and economic considerat­ions are not at odds – we will find ways to revive our air hub and keep Singapore safe,” Mr Ong said.

The country’s airport has been “almost totally incapacita­ted,” with only about 150 aircraft movements a day compared with more than 1000 previously. There are no domestic flights for Changi Airport to serve.

The Southeast Asian nation has been hard hit by the pandemic, given its tourism industry largely relies on internatio­nal travellers to keep its shops and attraction­s humming.

It welcomed just 3800 visitors in the second quarter, the least on record, and its economy is heading for the worst contractio­n since independen­ce.

Changi Airport closed two of its four terminals and constructi­on of a fifth terminal has been halted for at least two years as the outbreak is set to change the way people travel. Mr Ong signalled any new travel arrangemen­ts could be a way to boost passenger numbers at the airport to about 40 per cent of pre-COVID levels.

“Our challenge is to restore passenger volume, while keeping virus transmissi­on under control,” he said.

Keep borders open

The city-state is expecting new virus cases to fall now that it has cleared its heavily-impacted migrant worker dormitorie­s of the virus.

Already, Singapore has inked arrangemen­ts with China and Malaysia to allow business and official travellers, and Mr Ong said such reciprocal green lanes could be proliferat­ed.

The Southeast Asian nation said this week it is working toward such an arrangemen­t with Japan as early as September.

Mr Ong, who was most recently Education Minister, had kept schools in the city-state open throughout the pandemic, except during a two-month partial lockdown.

“To survive, we have to keep our borders open,” Mr Ong said.

“To thrive, we have to connect to the world. To prosper, we have to be a hub of the global economy.”

 ?? Photo: Changi AIrport ?? World’s tallest indoor waterfall at Singapore’s Changi Airport. Just another mind-blowing way to pass the time at Singapore’s Changi Airport.
Photo: Changi AIrport World’s tallest indoor waterfall at Singapore’s Changi Airport. Just another mind-blowing way to pass the time at Singapore’s Changi Airport.

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