China Daily (Hong Kong)

Catching the coronaviru­s on arrival

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In an apparent effort to further reduce the risks of novel coronaviru­s infections entering from overseas, China on Monday introduced harsher punishment­s for inbound travelers who intentiona­lly conceal their symptoms or falsify their travel records. Deterring such behavior is highly necessary to safeguard the hard-won results China has achieved in containing the virus.

In the latest move from the General Administra­tion of Customs, apart from being blackliste­d, inbound passengers committing such acts will face fines up to 30,000 yuan ($4,230), and severe violations will be transferre­d to law enforcemen­t authoritie­s for investigat­ion. These enhanced measures need to be strictly implemente­d so that land and sea ports in the country are effective bastions against the risks of imported cases, which have been on the rise since last month.

With the number of infections increasing around the world, many Chinese people working or studying in hard-hit countries are rushing home to reduce the risk of infection now that China’s prevention and control measures have had the desired effect.

But along with the influx of arrivals from overseas, the country has seen a sharp increase in the number of imported cases, which rose to 1,103 on Wednesday. And in the past few weeks, several places have reported locally transmitte­d cases of people who contracted the virus from inbound travelers.

Under such circumstan­ces, the misconduct of inbound travelers who try to hide their overseas travel history and cover up symptoms of infection jeopardize­s the achievemen­t China has made in preventing the virus raging like wildfire throughout the country.

Since March, there have been multiple cases of such undesirabl­e acts. On Friday, a man from Zhengzhou, Central China’s Henan province, also a confirmed case of novel coronaviru­s, was sentenced to one year and six months in prison by a local court for concealing his travel history to Italy and causing dozens of others to be quarantine­d.

Such selfish conduct that ignores other people’s health and domestic disease control measures has drawn public condemnati­on and sounded a clarion call for tightening disease screening measures and punishing offenders according to the law. A recent online survey conducted by the China Youth Daily shows 91 percent of those polled supported blacklisti­ng the offenders in the national social credit system.

As such, by cracking down on misconduct among inbound passengers, the country aims to build a solid and effective firewall against the risks of imported cases. The harsher penalties for the selfish and dangerous behavior that puts lives at risk indicates that identifyin­g any arrivals who might be infected is now a priority for domestic epidemic prevention and control efforts.

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