BusinessMirror

Nations to adopt entry restrictio­ns amid China’s massive Covid surge

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NATIONS across the globe are implementi­ng or considerin­g measures to test or restrict travelers from China as the country of 1.4 billion abandons its Covid Zero policy and prepares to reopen borders in early January.

The US is considerin­g new coronaviru­s precaution­s for people traveling from China amid questions about the transparen­cy of data China is reporting about the spread of the virus, according to American officials, who asked not to be identified discussing internal thinking. Japan moved quickly yesterday to announce steps requiring a negative Covid-19 test upon arrival soon after Beijing said it no longer subject inbound travelers to quarantine from Jan. 8.

China is rapidly dismantlin­g its stringent pandemic measures in the face of discontent with Covid Zero rules, triggering outbreaks across the country. Uncertaint­y over the true scale of infections without reliable official figures is fueling concern that the rapid spread of the virus could lead to the emergence of new variants.

China is experienci­ng the world’s largest Covid-19 outbreak, raising concerns among publicheal­th officials worldwide. Almost 37 million people may have been infected with the virus on a single day last week, according to estimates from the government’s top health authority.

Earlier this week, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said there are “great discrepanc­ies” in informatio­n coming out of the country, fueling growing concern. Japan will require negative Covid-19 test results upon arrival for visitors who have been in mainland China within a sevenday period, while those who test positive will have to quarantine for a week.

The US is weighing similar steps, the officials said, as a way to prevent further spread. Malaysia has also imposed new tracking and surveillan­ce measures. India began random testing of about 2% of passengers arriving from other countries at all internatio­nal airports a week ago to minimize the risk of any new variant entering the country.

Holiday bookings for outbound flights from mainland China jumped 254% Tuesday morning from the day before, according to Trip.com Group Ltd. data, underscori­ng how the country’s vast population is ready and hungry for travel. The top five destinatio­ns were Singapore, with a 600% increase in bookings, followed by about 400% for South Korea, Hong Kong, Japan and Thailand.

China will start issuing new passports and Hong Kong travel permits to mainland residents, the National Immigratio­n Administra­tion said in an announceme­nt on Wechat late on Monday.

Express checkpoint­s on the borders with Hong Kong and Macau will resume, while applicatio­ns by foreigners to extend or renew visas will also re-commence as part of the relaxation of measures on January 8.

Taiwan may also adjust Covid measures such as testing as it anticipate­s tens of thousands of people returning from the Chinese mainland for the Chinese New Year later in January, cabinet spokespers­on Lo Ping-cheng said in a statement. While Taiwan currently does not allow mainland Chinese tourists to get in, many Taiwanese work and invest in the mainland.

Philippine Transport Secretary Jaime Bautista called for Covid measures on Wednesday, including testing on inbound travelers from China. “We should be very cautious because if they have a lot of Covid cases, we should be careful about Chinese visitors coming into the Philippine­s,” he told reporters.

The new US travel precaution­s are based on consultati­ons with public health experts and internatio­nal partners, officials said. They said the talks have been prompted in part by concerns over the lack of genomic sequencing data that could help identify the emergence of a new variant.

Health experts have said they’re worried that the virus’s unabated spread could spawn a dangerous new variant for the first time since the Omicron strain caused infections to surge more than a year ago.

GISAID, the global consortium that maintains a database for scientists around the world to share coronaviru­s sequences to monitor mutations, said on Tuesday that China has ramped up its surveillan­ce amid the ongoing outbreak. All the sequences shared by the Chinese health authoritie­s suggest the viruses fueling the massive nationwide outbreak closely resemble the circulatin­g variants found in the rest of the world since July, they added.

 ?? AP ?? A PATIENT rests in a bed at the emergency department of the Langfang No. 4 People’s Hospital in Bazhou City in northern China’s Hebei province on Thursday, December 22, 2022. As China grapples with its first-ever wave of Covid mass infections, emergency wards in the towns and cities to Beijing’s southwest are overwhelme­d. Intensive care units are turning away ambulances, residents are driving sick relatives from hospital to hospital, and patients are lying on floors for lack of space.
AP A PATIENT rests in a bed at the emergency department of the Langfang No. 4 People’s Hospital in Bazhou City in northern China’s Hebei province on Thursday, December 22, 2022. As China grapples with its first-ever wave of Covid mass infections, emergency wards in the towns and cities to Beijing’s southwest are overwhelme­d. Intensive care units are turning away ambulances, residents are driving sick relatives from hospital to hospital, and patients are lying on floors for lack of space.

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