Fiji Sun

New Zealand won’t require Chinese arrivals to show COVID-19 test

- Reuters

Wellington: The New Zealand government said on Wednesday it would not require travellers from China to produce a negative COVID-19 test, bucking a trend that has seen a number of nations implement such measures as cases surge in China.

New Zealand’s COVID-19 minister, Ayesha Verrall, said in a statement that a public health risk assessment had concluded visitors from China would not contribute significan­tly to the number of cases in the country.as the case but had now asked for a briefing. “There is minimal public health risk to New Zealand,” she said. A number of countries including Britain, the United States and Australia have demanded that travellers from China produce a negative COVID-19 test over concerns about the scale of the country’s outbreak and scepticism over Beijing’s health statistics. The move has been criticised by Chinese state-media as discrimato­ry. Infections in China have spiked after the country dropped its strict zero-cases policy on Dec 7, allowing the virus to spread.

All internatio­nal arrivals in New Zealand are asked to test if they become symptomati­c and the country provides free tests at the airport.

Officials will be asking some travellers from China to do voluntary tests to gather more informatio­n, which Verrall said reflected New Zealand’s concern alongside that of the World Health Organizati­on about China’s lack of informatio­n sharing. New Zealand is also planning to trial testing waste water on internatio­nal flights to see if this can replace targetted and voluntary testing of individual­s.

 ?? Photo: RNZ Pacific ?? New Zealand COVID-19 Response Minister Ayesha Verrall
Photo: RNZ Pacific New Zealand COVID-19 Response Minister Ayesha Verrall

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