Why Singapore isn’t imposing new travel rules on visitors from China

Singapore’s Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung told Parliament Monday that the government is not imposing new restrictions on travelers from China because limited flight capacity, combined with its current border policies, have resulted in few imported cases — and even fewer severe cases — coming from China. Ong said the government is “acutely aware” that some Singaporeans are worried that an influx of visitors from China could lead to a rise in infections. But he said travel volumes between Singapore and China are “very low” — with fewer than 1,000 people arriving from China daily. “As of now, we run 38 weekly flights from China to Singapore, compared to around 400 flights pre-Covid,” he said. Ong acknowledged that a new, more dangerous variant could emerge from China as the virus spreads through its population of 1.4b, but said that so far, this has not materialized. Ong said Singapore is monitoring this through GISAID, a non-profit organization that he said is obtaining viral sequencing data from authorities in major Chinese cities and provinces, such as Beijing, Shanghai and Sichuan, which is processed in GISAID’s Singapore office. Though there are “gaps in the data,” Ong said, “So far, the data shows that the epidemic in China is driven by variants that are well-known and have been circulating in other regions of the world” — namely BA.5.2 and BF.7. So far, more than a dozen countries have announced new rules for visitors from China. But Ong said Singapore did not, because it already has effective border measures in place. “Many countries have dismantled all their border measures,” he said. “Singapore … kept relevant measures precisely because we anticipated these risks.”<br/>
CNBC
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/01/13/singapore-covid-travel-rules-why-singapore-isnt-singling-china-out.html?&qsearchterm=airlines
1/12/23