Philippine Daily Inquirer

SUBIC FREEPORT DROPS COVID TEST FOR VAXXED TOURISTS

- —JOANNA

SUBIC BAY FREEPORT—The Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA) has started accepting vaccine cards or certificat­es of vaccinatio­n status as alternativ­e to negative real-time reverse transcript­ion-polymerase chain reaction, or RT-PCR, tests from tourists who plan to stay here for at least four days.

In an advisory on July 9, SBMA Chair Wilma Eisma said the new travel protocol inside the free port complied with Resolution No. 125 released by the

Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) on July 8.

Under the latest IATF resolution, COVID-19 vaccinatio­n cards issued by legitimate vaccinatio­n establishm­ents would be sufficient proof for interzonal or domestic travel.

According to Eisma, fully vaccinated senior citizens within areas under modified general community quarantine (MGCQ) would still be allowed. MGCQ is the least restrictiv­e quarantine classifica­tion in the country.

She said elderly visitors would also be required to present their vaccinatio­n cards or certificat­es of quarantine completion showing their vaccinatio­n status.

The SBMA has also allowed children 5 years old and above to go outdoors, except in shopping malls, but with strict adult supervisio­n.

Eisma said minimum health and safety protocols would still be enforced within the free port, one of the top destinatio­ns in Central

Luzon prior to the pandemic.

Outdoor events

As restrictio­ns on leisure travel and movements of people have been gradually eased, the free port has begun allowing sports and other outdoor events with strict guidelines.

On July 10, the beach area along the boardwalk here became the venue for drone and flying car enthusiast Kyxz Mendiola to attempt to break the Guinness World Record for farthest manned hoverboard flight.

Hoverboard is a self-balancing scooter made of a pair of motorized wheels attached to a platform and functions like skateboard­s.

Mendiola’s official distance was recorded at 2,890 meters, surpassing the record (2,252.4 m, or 7,389 feet 9 inches) made by Franky Zapata of France in Sausset-les-Pins, France, on April 30, 2016.

The same world record was previously held by Canadian inventor Catalin Alexandru Duru in 2015 at 275.5 m.

Officials of the Guinness Book of World Records have yet to officially confirm Mendiola’s feat.

In February this year, the free port also hosted the country’s first volleyball tournament during the pandemic. It was held under a “sports bubble” concept approved by the IATF, the SBMA said.

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