The Free Press Journal

DGCA extends airport screening to passengers from Japan, S Korea

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Aviation regulator DGCA asked airports and airlines on Friday that passengers arriving in flights from Japan and South Korea must be screened once they step out of aerobridge­s in order to prevent the spread of novel coronaviru­s infection.

Till date, only passengers arriving from four countries — China, Hong Kong, Thailand and Singapore — were being screened for possible exposure to the respirator­y virus at 21 identified airports in India.

The Indian Embassy in Japan said on Friday that a third Indian crew on board a cruise ship off the Japanese coast has tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s as authoritie­s confirmed that total 218 people have been infected with the deadly virus on the quarantine­d ship.

Two crew members, out of total 138 Indians on board the cruise ship Diamond

Princess, were tested positive for the virus earlier.

In a circular, the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) stated, “Universal screening of all the passengers coming in flights directly from Japan, South Korea, Thailand and Singapore besides the flights from China and Hong Kong shall be ensured immediatel­y once they step out of the specific identified aerobridge.”

“It is advised to place the suitable signages at strategic locations at all the airports and getting the self-declaratio­n form filled by the passengers as per the instructio­ns of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare,” it added.

So far, India has reported three confirmed cases of nCoV, all from Kerala. Three medical students of the Wuhan University, all natives of Kerala, who returned to India on their own recently and self-reported at a hospital in the state tested positive for the respirator­y virus, named COVID-19.

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