The Pak Banker

China’s zero-Covid policy to hit Asia aviation recovery: IATA

- SINGAPORE

China’s zero-Covid policy will hold back a full air travel recovery in the Asia-Pacific region, a top airline industry group warned Tuesday, adding to calls for Beijing to ease its hardline stance.

The world’s secondbigg­est economy is seeking to stamp out the coronaviru­s entirely, with rapid lockdowns and mass testing, and the measures have hammered both domestic and internatio­nal air travel.

The aviation sector’s recovery in Asia was already relatively slow, and Willie Walsh, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) chief, warned Beijing’s approach made the picture bleaker.

“It has been a brutal two years for airlines. But we are seeing signs of recovery now,” he told an aviation conference in Singapore.

“Unfortunat­ely, (the) Asia-Pacific region will lag this recovery as China continues to pursue zero-Covid.”

In 2021 in Asia, internatio­nal travel was only seven percent of what it was in 2019, compared with a worldwide figure of 25 percent, he said.

Normal life is weeks away for Shanghai, despite ‘zero COVID’ status

While the picture had improved at the start of this year, there was still a “long way to go”, he added.

China’s decision to stick with zero-Covid has put it at odds with many Asian government­s, which have started reopening borders and dropping quarantine and testing requiremen­ts in recent months.

“The science supports these initiative­s,” Walsh told the Changi Aviation Summit, attended by top industry officials.

IATA is “convinced that this science supports the removal of testing and quarantine for unvaccinat­ed travellers from areas of high population immunity, including many parts of this region,” he said.

China, the last major economy still closed off to the world, is facing mounting calls to drop the zero-Covid policy which has left millions in Shanghai locked down for weeks.

Last week, the World Health Organizati­on said the approach was unsustaina­ble. -AFP

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