Global Times

Air flights taking notice

Regulator extends suspension time for carriers taking in 5- 10 infection cases

- By Tu Lei

China’s civil aviation regulator has decided to extend the suspension time for air flights if five or more on- board passengers test positive for the coronaviru­s, always putting safety as its top concern.

Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China ( CAAC) said on Wednesday that it will update its regulation­s for inbound flights, stating if five or more passengers test positive for COVID- 19, the air route in question will be suspended for two weeks, one week longer than the previously required.

The rule of airlines would be suspended for four weeks, if 10 or more passengers are tested positive, the same as the previous standard.

The announceme­nt was posted on the official website of CAAC, explaining that the move is to attribute to curbing the offshore COVID- 19 cases being carried into China.

“The heightened regulation is not a remedy, more like a preventive move to control the virus from being imported to the country,” Lin Zhijie, an independen­t market watcher told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Over the past one or two months, sporadic infection cases have been identified in many cities in China. Since December, in less than half a month, cities such as Jiaozhou in East China’s Shandong Province and Chengdu in Southwest China’s Sichuan Province have seen local confirmed cases and asymptomat­ic infections.

As the spread of the pandemic in autumn and winter is on the rise, and new cases in some countries and region shave reached new record highs, meaning China is under heightened epidemic prevention situation, Lin explained.

Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiolo­gist of

Chinese Center for

Disease Control and Prevention also said that, after the onset of winter season, other countries have experience­d a sharp increase in the number of COVID- 19 cases, which had placed rising pressure on the global fight on the deadly disease.

The latest example is that a pilot in Sichuan Airlines was confirmed as an imported case of COVID- 19 on Monday.

Effective virus control

China introduced circuit breaker measures for inbound air flights on June 8, saying that the circuit breaker will be triggered when five passengers traveling on a flight operated by an airline test positive for the virus.

In this case, if less than 10 passengers show positive results, the said airline’s flights on this route shall be suspended for one week. If 10 or more passengers test positive, the suspension will be extended to four weeks. Quota cut by the circuit breaker shall not be transferre­d to other flight routes. The airline can only resume its one- flight weekly schedule after the suspension ends.

Following the schemes introducti­on by CAAC, suspended flights have kept growing over recent months.

The suspended number of flights increased from 3 in June and 7 flights in July to more than 20 flights in August and September, and then to 52 flight in October, according to Han Guangzu, an official from CAAC on December 3. Later by November, the number of suspended flights has come down to around 20.

Han said a total of 259 inbound flights have been suspected since the new scheme was enforced.

In addition, domestic airlines are stepping up efforts to curb imported cases, such as China Southern Airlines, the largest air carrier in China by fleet size, said that from November 3, it will stop taking passengers departing from 21 countries to China that transfer via a third country or region.

The countries include 10 in Africa including Ghana, Guinea and Ethiopia.

Different voices

However, there are still voices to advocate the air regulator to cancel the circuit breaker mechanism, claiming that it has made life difficult for the airlines, and it is not the airlines’ duty and responsibi­lity to make sure the passengers to test negative upon arrival.

An anonymous industry insider who has been following the aviation industry for years told the Global Times that the airlines are hard to re- arrange the aircraft allocation, air crews shift and passengers itinerary once getting the notice from the regulator to suspend flying

It is hard to say who ought to shoulder the responsibi­lities, if passengers are eligible 48 hours before boarding, but later got infection, he added, given the fact that the probabilit­y of being infected onboard the aircraft is low.

More Chinese embassies have joined the push for pre- departure health codes based on coronaviru­s nucleic acid and the antibody testing, a prerequisi­te for China- bound travels, which requires that Chinese and foreign passengers flying directly to China should take nucleic acid and IgM anti- body tests within two days before departure.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? Passengers scan health code at Guangzhou Baiyun Internatio­nal Airport after landing in October.
Photo: cnsphoto Passengers scan health code at Guangzhou Baiyun Internatio­nal Airport after landing in October.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China