China Daily

‘Circuit-breaker’ suspension issued for overseas airline

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s civil aviation regulator on Monday issued its third “circuitbre­aker” suspension of an internatio­nal passenger flight since it set up a mechanism to contain the number of imported COVID-19 cases.

The Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China on Monday ordered a one-week suspension of a US-Bangla Airlines flight from Dhaka, Bangladesh, to Guangzhou, Guangdong province, due to some passengers on a recent flight having tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s, the first circuit-breaker suspension toward an overseas carrier.

A total of five passengers on the June 28 flight from Bangladesh’s capital to the provincial capital of Guangdong tested positive for coronaviru­s, meeting the conditions for a circuit-breaker suspension of the route, the administra­tion said in a statement.

The directive was made in line with an internatio­nal flights adjustment policy rolled out on June 4.

China eased restrictio­ns on internatio­nal passenger flights last month under the condition that risks of infection are controlled, highlighti­ng the adoption of a

“reward and circuit-breaker mechanism” for the carriers to increase or suspend flights in light of the companies’ epidemic control work.

Under the policy, airlines must suspend flights on a route for a week if at least five passengers test positive for the coronaviru­s. If the number exceeds 10, the airline must suspend the flights for four weeks.

As an incentive, carriers may increase the number of internatio­nal flights to two per week on a route if for three consecutiv­e weeks no passengers test positive for the virus.

On June issued its 14, the first administra­tion circuit-breaker directive and demanded a fourweek suspension of a China Southern Airlines flight, also from Dhaka to Guangzhou, after 17 passengers tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

The civil aviation regulator issued the second directive for a one-week suspension of a Sichuan Airlines flight from Egypt’s capital, Cairo, to Chengdu, Sichuan province, on July 1 after six passengers tested positive.

China has seen confirmed cases involving travelers from overseas outnumber locally-transmitte­d cases in the past six days, according to data from the National Health Commission.

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