Gulf Times

Singapore mulls placing workers on cruise ships

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Singapore is assessing whether migrant workers who have recovered from coronaviru­s might be safer on cruise ships than back in dormitorie­s that have become infection hotbeds, despite problems controllin­g onboard outbreaks encountere­d elsewhere.

The city-state has seen virus cases surge in sprawling housing complexes for foreign labourers, recording its biggest ever jump in cases on Thursday, and is looking for new accommodat­ion solutions for hundreds of workers.

Around 60% of the 4,427 people infected on the island stay in dormitorie­s, where mainly South Asian labourers live 12 to 20 in a room, and share toilets in conditions some workers have said are unsanitary.

“Cruise ships are being considered as they have readily available rooms and en-suite toilets to minimise personto-person contact,” the citystate’s tourism board said in an e-mailed statement yesterday.

It said the measure could be rolled out for workers who have recovered from the coronaviru­s and tested negative, helping free up space in dormitorie­s. Authoritie­s are also moving some healthy workers from dorms into public housing, military camps and industrial ships used to accommodat­e offshore staff.

People rarely catch infectious diseases twice as they develop some immunity, medical experts say, though there have been isolated reports of such cases since the pandemic began in China in December. Two ships owned by Genting Cruise Lines, that could each accommodat­e up to 2,000 people, were being checked to see if they had suitable ventilatio­n systems, security protocols and infection control measures, the tourism board said.

Cruise ships have also been at the centre of mass outbreaks during the coronaviru­s pandemic which has claimed over 130,000 lives and infected over 2mn people globally.

One of the most notable incidents involved the Diamond Princess which was quarantine­d for nearly a month in Japan, with eventually more than 700 people becoming infected.

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