The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sponsors to bear half quarantine cost for students starting June 1

-

PUTRAJAYA: Half of the cost of quarantine for sponsored students overseas who have graduated and will return home starting June 1 will be borne by their respective sponsors.

Senior Minister (Security Cluster) Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob said 50 per cent of the quarantine cost for the students will be borne by the government and the other 50 per cent, by their sponsors.

“Those students were sponsored by either the PSD (Public Service Department) or other government agencies and many of them had requested to be exempted from paying the hotel fees for quarantine.

“We have agreed to have the sponsors financing the cost for them and parents need not to worry,” he told the daily media conference on the Conditiona­l Movement Control Order (CMCO) here yesterday.

Ismail Sabri said, so far, 18,000 Malaysian citizens overseas had made an online registrati­on and signed the agreement to pay 50 per cent of the hotel fees for the 14-day mandatory quarantine upon returning to Malaysia.

The majority of them were students who had graduated and no longer required to stay abroad, he added.

Meanwhile, Ismail Sabri said there was no need for the government to conduct Covid19 screening and test on foreign students at local universiti­es.

“Only when there is a case at the university will we isolate them for treatment. but so far, there is no case involving foreign students at local universiti­es,” he said.

When asked on the Covid-19 contact tracing applicatio­ns developed by several state government­s, including the PgCare in Penang, SELangkah in Selangor and Jejak Johor in Johor, the minister said there was no objection for the states to develop their own applicatio­ns for the purpose.

Members of the public are not prohibited from downloadin­g the applicatio­ns as the roles and functions may differ, he said.

“As for the federal government, we have developed three applicatio­ns, namely the MySejahter­a, MyTrace and Gerak Malaysia.

“The Gerak Malaysia applicatio­n, for example, will generate the QR (Quick Response) Code so that users will not have to write their names and telephone numbers every time they want to enter a shopping mall or a restaurant,” he explained.

“This is because many are scared to (touch the pen and) write down their names. So, I encourage the public to download the applicatio­ns developed by the federal government,” he said.

In another developmen­t, Ismail Sabri reminded the public to heed the advice given by Rela members as they were also helping the police in ensuring compliance with the CMCO standard operating procedures (SOP).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia