The Philippine Star

Phl bans travelers from South Asia

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

The Philippine­s yesterday imposed a travel ban on passengers from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka as a precaution­ary measure against the entry of the COVID-19 variant first reported in India.

All passengers coming from or who have been to the four countries within 14 days immediatel­y preceding arrival in the Philippine­s shall be barred from entering Manila from May 7 to 14, according to a memorandum signed by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea.

However, those arriving before

May 7 will not be prohibited from entering the country but will have to undergo quarantine in a designated facility for 14 days, notwithsta­nding a negative COVID-19 RT-PCR test result.

Passengers merely transiting through Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh will not be deemed as having come from or having been to such countries as long as they stayed in the airport the whole time and were not cleared for entry into these countries by immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Upon arrival in the Philippine­s, passengers who just transited through the four countries do not need to complete a two-week facility-based quarantine but they have to comply with existing testing and quarantine protocols of the government.

All specimens of travelers coming from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh that tested positive for COVID-19 in the Philippine­s shall undergo whole genome sequencing.

All of their close contacts must undergo facility-based quarantine for 14 days and contact tracing shall expand up to the third generation contacts, the memorandum stated.

The Philippine­s has banned travelers from India from April 29 to May 14 as the South Asian country faces a surge in pandemic infections.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque had previously said the government was studying the World Health Organizati­on’s recommenda­tion to impose restrictio­ns on travelers from countries with high passenger traffic from India.

NAIA inbound capacity increased

Meanwhile, the government has increased to 2,000 per day the allowed number of internatio­nal passengers arriving at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA) for this month.

In an advisory dated May 3, the Civil Aeronautic­s Board (CAB) also warned that an appropriat­e penalty will be meted out on airlines operating in the country’s main internatio­nal gateway should they exceed the allowed daily inbound capacity.

Prior to the announced increase in internatio­nal inbound passenger capacity, a cap of 1,500 passenger arrivals per day had been imposed at the airport since March 18 to mitigate the risk of new COVID-19 variants entering the country.

Philippine Airlines stressed that while the new cap is an improvemen­t, the increase is still on the conservati­ve side. – With Richmond Mercurio, Rudy Santos

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