Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

COVID-19: Tough measures on card; Italy returnees tested negative

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Two Sri Lankans who returned from Italy, now at the National Institute of Infectious Diseases ( NIID), have tested negative for COVID- 19 as fears mounted with more countries across the world falling under the onslaught of the new coronaviru­s.

Passengers on direct flights from China and now also from South Korea and Italy to Sri Lanka are channelled through a separate entrance and screened thoroughly.

Those on these flights come down gangways, board buses and enter the airport through a separate entry- point, where they are screened well. Those on other flights, walk into the airport directly through an aerobridge, it is learnt.

Several recommenda­tions to introduce additional measures to ward off the new coronaviru­s from entering Sri Lanka are on the table, following meetings this week of the National Committee headed by Health Minister

Pavithra Wanniarach­chi and the Technical Committee headed by Health Services Director- General Dr. Anil Jasinghe, the Sunday Times learns.

Dr. Jasinghe, when contacted by the Sunday Times, declined to specify these measures as they were awaiting ratificati­on by the government.

When asked about the Quarantine and Prevention of Diseases Ordinance, he said in certain eventualit­ies this law could be invoked and this could vest the Health Services DG with a lot of power including implementi­ng a lockdown, movement restrictio­ns and home-quarantine.

Two of the countries affected by the new coronaviru­s are South Korea and Italy where a large number of Sri Lankan migrant workers are based.

There are a few Sri Lankans who are in the quarantine­d areas in Lombardy and Veneto regions in northern Italy, but none of them has fallen victim to the virus, said Foreign Relations Ministry spokespers­on Ruwanthi Delpitiya yesterday.

According to informatio­n from the Sri

Lanka Embassy in Rome and the Consulate General Office in Milan, as of yesterday, the total number of COVID-19 infected persons in Italy had risen to 821 with 17 deaths, she said.

“The Foreign Ministry with the Sri Lanka Embassy in Rome and the Consulate General Office in Milan continues to monitor and coordinate efforts to ensure the safety of the Sri Lankans in these areas,” she added.

In Seoul, the Sri Lanka Embassy, meanwhile, has informed that the number of people who have contracted COVID-19 has increased to 2,931 as of yesterday, with 16 deaths.

Ms. Delpitiya said no Sri Lankan in any location in South Korea, including Daegu, was suspected to have contracted COVID-19 or was being treated for any of the symptoms of the disease.

Sri Lanka has so far had only one imported case of the coronaviru­s. The Chinese woman tourist who was detected with COVID-19 on January 27, was treated and managed at the National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID). She was discharged on February 19 after two tests came negative and left for home in China.

Meanwhile, according to the Epidemiolo­gy Unit, the NIID has two ‘ suspected’ cases; the Ratnapura Teaching Hospital – 2; the Kurunegala Teaching Hospital – 2; the Gampaha District General Hospital – 1; the Karapitiya Teaching Hospital – 1; and the Lady Ridgeway Hospital for Children, Colombo -1.

As the new coronaviru­s spread, Saudi Arabia temporaril­y halted the entry of pilgrims on visits to holy sites, in an attempt to slow the spread of the disease.

 ??  ?? The screening process underway at Bandaranai­ke Internatio­nal Airport
The screening process underway at Bandaranai­ke Internatio­nal Airport

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