• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Akan datang: Australia calls off travel bubble arrangement with SG

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
HK called off its travel bubble arrangement with SG.
Australia will be next.
Both countries are alarmed by the rising number of covid-19 cases in SG because of travellers from India.

Australia eyeing S'pore for next travel bubble after quarantine-free travel with New Zealand takes off
1 of 3
dummy.gif

The opening of the travel bubble has led to tearful reunions and the excited resumption of overseas holidays.

The opening of the travel bubble has led to tearful reunions and the excited resumption of overseas holidays.PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
jonathan_pearlman.png

Jonathan Pearlman
For The Straits Times

APR 21, 2021


SYDNEY - On Monday morning (April 19), Ms Christina Cassin arrived in Melbourne from Wellington after taking advantage of a newly opened quarantine-free travel bubble between Australia and New Zealand.
Her rush to make it to Australia was understandable. Due to Covid-19 travel restrictions, she had been unable to visit her daughter or see her baby grandson, who was born five months ago.
"I was thinking it wasn't going to happen until we had the vaccine," she told The Age.
"But when they opened that bubble up, I just knew I had to come on the first flight."
The opening of the travel bubble - the first for both countries - has led to tearful reunions and the excited resumption of overseas holidays.
Some Australian airports greeted the first quarantine-free arrivals in more than a year with traditional dances, while newspapers have been filled with advertisements for hotels and holiday opportunities. Both countries are largely free of community-transmitted cases of Covid-19.


Initial flights between the country were close to capacity, as airlines hired extra workers and operated additional flights to accommodate the demand. On Monday alone, almost 10,000 people travelled between the two neighbours.
The excitement quickly raised hopes in Australia's hard-hit travel sector about the possibility of opening to other destinations, particularly Singapore.
Australia's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Transport, Mr Michael McCormack, said this week that Singapore was top of the list for a potential next bubble.
He said the government is exploring further opportunities for bubbles with countries that had low risk of Covid-19 transmission, and discussions with Singapore started some weeks ago between the departments of the transport ministries of both countries.

"Hopefully more travel bubbles will be able to be opened up with perhaps Singapore, (and) who knows, Japan, South Korea, South Pacific island nations," he told Sky News.
Since the outbreak of the pandemic, Australia has imposed some of the world's most stringent travel restrictions. Entry is permitted to only Australian citizens, residents and their families, who are largely required to pay for their compulsory 14-day quarantine stay. And Australian residents are barred from leaving the country, though they may request an exemption from the government.
In recent months, Australia has been mostly free of locally-transmitted Covid-19 cases and life has all but returned to normal. Occasional local outbreaks have occurred after quarantine breaches but swift contact tracing has helped to contain these clusters.
Now, as Australia and other countries begin to embark on vaccination roll-outs, the travel sector is urging Canberra to find ways to reopen its borders.
While the New Zealand bubble has given the travel sector a boost, high-worth tourists from Asia, America and Europe are still unable to visit.

Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said this week he was hopeful that Australia would soon be able to open bubbles with destinations such as Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan.
"Of course, we would like to see the rest of the international borders open up," he told ABC News.
"But we want it to happen in a safe way because we don't want all of the good work that has happened in the domestic market to go backwards… When you have any form of quarantine, it does suppress demand for travel."
Airports, hotels and other airlines have all echoed these calls.

But Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has made it clear he will not rush to open Australia's borders.
"Australia is in no hurry to open those borders," he told reporters last weekend. "The Covid pandemic is raging around the world… I will not be putting at risk the way we are living in this country, which is so different to the rest of the world today."
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
HK called off its travel bubble arrangement with SG.
Australia will be next.
Both countries are alarmed by the rising number of covid-19 cases in SG because of travellers from India.

Australia eyeing S'pore for next travel bubble after quarantine-free travel with New Zealand takes off
1 of 3
dummy.gif

The opening of the travel bubble has led to tearful reunions and the excited resumption of overseas holidays.

The opening of the travel bubble has led to tearful reunions and the excited resumption of overseas holidays.PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
jonathan_pearlman.png

Jonathan Pearlman
For The Straits Times

APR 21, 2021


SYDNEY - On Monday morning (April 19), Ms Christina Cassin arrived in Melbourne from Wellington after taking advantage of a newly opened quarantine-free travel bubble between Australia and New Zealand.
Her rush to make it to Australia was understandable. Due to Covid-19 travel restrictions, she had been unable to visit her daughter or see her baby grandson, who was born five months ago.
"I was thinking it wasn't going to happen until we had the vaccine," she told The Age.
"But when they opened that bubble up, I just knew I had to come on the first flight."
The opening of the travel bubble - the first for both countries - has led to tearful reunions and the excited resumption of overseas holidays.
Some Australian airports greeted the first quarantine-free arrivals in more than a year with traditional dances, while newspapers have been filled with advertisements for hotels and holiday opportunities. Both countries are largely free of community-transmitted cases of Covid-19.


Initial flights between the country were close to capacity, as airlines hired extra workers and operated additional flights to accommodate the demand. On Monday alone, almost 10,000 people travelled between the two neighbours.
The excitement quickly raised hopes in Australia's hard-hit travel sector about the possibility of opening to other destinations, particularly Singapore.
Australia's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Transport, Mr Michael McCormack, said this week that Singapore was top of the list for a potential next bubble.
He said the government is exploring further opportunities for bubbles with countries that had low risk of Covid-19 transmission, and discussions with Singapore started some weeks ago between the departments of the transport ministries of both countries.

"Hopefully more travel bubbles will be able to be opened up with perhaps Singapore, (and) who knows, Japan, South Korea, South Pacific island nations," he told Sky News.
Since the outbreak of the pandemic, Australia has imposed some of the world's most stringent travel restrictions. Entry is permitted to only Australian citizens, residents and their families, who are largely required to pay for their compulsory 14-day quarantine stay. And Australian residents are barred from leaving the country, though they may request an exemption from the government.
In recent months, Australia has been mostly free of locally-transmitted Covid-19 cases and life has all but returned to normal. Occasional local outbreaks have occurred after quarantine breaches but swift contact tracing has helped to contain these clusters.
Now, as Australia and other countries begin to embark on vaccination roll-outs, the travel sector is urging Canberra to find ways to reopen its borders.
While the New Zealand bubble has given the travel sector a boost, high-worth tourists from Asia, America and Europe are still unable to visit.

Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said this week he was hopeful that Australia would soon be able to open bubbles with destinations such as Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan.
"Of course, we would like to see the rest of the international borders open up," he told ABC News.
"But we want it to happen in a safe way because we don't want all of the good work that has happened in the domestic market to go backwards… When you have any form of quarantine, it does suppress demand for travel."
Airports, hotels and other airlines have all echoed these calls.

But Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has made it clear he will not rush to open Australia's borders.
"Australia is in no hurry to open those borders," he told reporters last weekend. "The Covid pandemic is raging around the world… I will not be putting at risk the way we are living in this country, which is so different to the rest of the world today."
Even Kangaroo land wants to restrict SHITCAs from coming in,,,,and Singkieland is allowing shitcas to come in,,,the kangaroos are damn kiasee and kia su,,,so I doubt the travel bubble will be set up soon,,,



Western Australia calls for temporary ban on travellers from India after hotel quarantine Covid outbreak
WA premier says 40% of state’s quarantine cases in past month involved returned travellers from India, which is in the grips of a severe third wave
Follow the Australia liveblog
‘The system has collapsed’: India’s descent into Covid hell
Australians with a disability ‘forgotten’ in vaccine rollout
 Western Australian premier Mark McGowan wants the federal government to place a temporary ban on travellers from India. The country reported 295,041 new infections on Wednesday and 1.6m cases in the past week.

Western Australian premier Mark McGowan wants the federal government to place a temporary ban on travellers from India. The country reported 295,041 new infections on Wednesday and 1.6m cases in the past week. Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP

Christopher Knaus
@knausc
Thu 22 Apr 2021 12.39 AEST


13

The Western Australian premier Mark McGowan will ask the commonwealth to temporarily ban travellers from India following a hotel quarantine outbreak in the state.
The state government has revealed that two recent Covid-19 cases were the result of transmission in one of its quarantine hotels, the Mercure Hotel in Perth. Two guests were staying in a room opposite a couple who had just returned from India.

Genomic testing has shown the transmission occurred in the hotel.


Victorious over Covid, Australia and New Zealand grapple with vaccine rollout
Read more

India is currently in the grips of a severe third wave of Covid-19. It reported 295,041 new infections on Wednesday, the world’s highest-daily rise, and 1.6m cases in the past week.
McGowan said 40% of the state’s quarantine cases in the past month involved returned travellers from India, jumping from 11% the month prior.
The premier planned to take up the potential for a ban during Thursday’s national cabinet meeting.
“With more and more arrivals coming from India, we need to seriously look at temporarily restricting travel of people who have been in or through India,” McGowan said.
“The pre-testing measures ahead of international flights need to be examined.”
Western Australian premier Mark McGowan plans to advocate for a ban on travellers from India during Thursday’s national cabinet meeting.

Western Australian premier Mark McGowan plans to advocate for a ban on travellers from India during Thursday’s national cabinet meeting. Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP
Advertisement

But his position was rebuffed by the New South Wales premier, Gladys Berejiklian, who is also dealing with transmission in hotel quarantine.
She said no single country should be targeted.
“I don’t think it is fair or appropriate to distinguish one nation over others,” she said. “Things change, the rates of infections go up and down across the world. Aussies who want to come home should have the right to do that.”
NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian: ‘Aussies who want to come home should have the right to do that.’

NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian: ‘Aussies who want to come home should have the right to do that.’ Photograph: Jenny Evans/Getty Images
McGowan is not alone in calling for such a ban.
The Australian Medical Association’s Northern Territory president Robert Parker this week called for travel restrictions after the Howard Springs quarantine facility was hit with its highest number of positive Covid-19 cases since it started taking repatriation flights last year.
Two more cases involving returned travellers from India were recorded at Howard Springs on Wednesday, bringing the total to 18 since the weekend.
The territory’s health minister, Natasha Fyles, said the Indian outbreak would continue to be monitored but said her government had a “humanitarian responsibility” to repatriate vulnerable Australians.
Other nations have either considered or implemented bans, restrictions or travel cautions for India.


National cabinet to consider whether Australian Olympic athletes can jump vaccination queue
Read more

The United Kingdom this week added India to its “red list” of countries, banning travel for non-UK and non-Irish citizens to the UK from India. The UK government has faced criticism for acting too slowly to restrict travel from India.
Advertisement

Hong Kong, Pakistan and New Zealand have also enacted temporary bans on travellers from India.
NSW is currently investigating how three returned travellers from two families contracted the South African variant of the virus after staying at the Mercure Hotel in Sydney. Authorities believe the transmission occurred in the hotel, because the individuals were tested and cleared after arriving in Australia. NSW is warning that contacts of the three infected individuals have already travelled interstate.
Another 40 returned travellers were staying on the same level of the hotel at the time.
“We have managed to contact 36 of those individuals, a number have gone into other states and territories and those states and territories have been alerted,” the NSW chief medical officer, Kerry Chant, said.
She said they were “urgently escalating” efforts to contact the remaining four people.
Staff potentially exposed will also have to self-isolate.
 

birdie69

Alfrescian
Loyal
Even Kangaroo land wants to restrict SHITCAs from coming in,,,,and Singkieland is allowing shitcas to come in,,,the kangaroos are damn kiasee and kia su,,,so I doubt the travel bubble will be set up soon,,,



Western Australia calls for temporary ban on travellers from India after hotel quarantine Covid outbreak
WA premier says 40% of state’s quarantine cases in past month involved returned travellers from India, which is in the grips of a severe third wave
Follow the Australia liveblog
‘The system has collapsed’: India’s descent into Covid hell
Australians with a disability ‘forgotten’ in vaccine rollout
 Western Australian premier Mark McGowan wants the federal government to place a temporary ban on travellers from India. The country reported 295,041 new infections on Wednesday and 1.6m cases in the past week.

Western Australian premier Mark McGowan wants the federal government to place a temporary ban on travellers from India. The country reported 295,041 new infections on Wednesday and 1.6m cases in the past week. Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP

Christopher Knaus
@knausc
Thu 22 Apr 2021 12.39 AEST


13

The Western Australian premier Mark McGowan will ask the commonwealth to temporarily ban travellers from India following a hotel quarantine outbreak in the state.
The state government has revealed that two recent Covid-19 cases were the result of transmission in one of its quarantine hotels, the Mercure Hotel in Perth. Two guests were staying in a room opposite a couple who had just returned from India.

Genomic testing has shown the transmission occurred in the hotel.

Victorious over Covid, Australia and New Zealand grapple with vaccine rollout
Read more

India is currently in the grips of a severe third wave of Covid-19. It reported 295,041 new infections on Wednesday, the world’s highest-daily rise, and 1.6m cases in the past week.
McGowan said 40% of the state’s quarantine cases in the past month involved returned travellers from India, jumping from 11% the month prior.
The premier planned to take up the potential for a ban during Thursday’s national cabinet meeting.
“With more and more arrivals coming from India, we need to seriously look at temporarily restricting travel of people who have been in or through India,” McGowan said.
“The pre-testing measures ahead of international flights need to be examined.”
Western Australian premier Mark McGowan plans to advocate for a ban on travellers from India during Thursday’s national cabinet meeting.

Western Australian premier Mark McGowan plans to advocate for a ban on travellers from India during Thursday’s national cabinet meeting. Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP
Advertisement

But his position was rebuffed by the New South Wales premier, Gladys Berejiklian, who is also dealing with transmission in hotel quarantine.
She said no single country should be targeted.
“I don’t think it is fair or appropriate to distinguish one nation over others,” she said. “Things change, the rates of infections go up and down across the world. Aussies who want to come home should have the right to do that.”
NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian: ‘Aussies who want to come home should have the right to do that.’

NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian: ‘Aussies who want to come home should have the right to do that.’ Photograph: Jenny Evans/Getty Images
McGowan is not alone in calling for such a ban.
The Australian Medical Association’s Northern Territory president Robert Parker this week called for travel restrictions after the Howard Springs quarantine facility was hit with its highest number of positive Covid-19 cases since it started taking repatriation flights last year.
Two more cases involving returned travellers from India were recorded at Howard Springs on Wednesday, bringing the total to 18 since the weekend.
The territory’s health minister, Natasha Fyles, said the Indian outbreak would continue to be monitored but said her government had a “humanitarian responsibility” to repatriate vulnerable Australians.
Other nations have either considered or implemented bans, restrictions or travel cautions for India.

National cabinet to consider whether Australian Olympic athletes can jump vaccination queue
Read more

The United Kingdom this week added India to its “red list” of countries, banning travel for non-UK and non-Irish citizens to the UK from India. The UK government has faced criticism for acting too slowly to restrict travel from India.
Advertisement

Hong Kong, Pakistan and New Zealand have also enacted temporary bans on travellers from India.
NSW is currently investigating how three returned travellers from two families contracted the South African variant of the virus after staying at the Mercure Hotel in Sydney. Authorities believe the transmission occurred in the hotel, because the individuals were tested and cleared after arriving in Australia. NSW is warning that contacts of the three infected individuals have already travelled interstate.
Another 40 returned travellers were staying on the same level of the hotel at the time.
“We have managed to contact 36 of those individuals, a number have gone into other states and territories and those states and territories have been alerted,” the NSW chief medical officer, Kerry Chant, said.
She said they were “urgently escalating” efforts to contact the remaining four people.
Staff potentially exposed will also have to self-isolate.
All the countries in the world envy Sinkapore brazen act of not banning Indians entering. But, will not hesitate to terminate the talk of bubble travel with Sinkapore
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
All the countries in the world envy Sinkapore brazen act of not banning Indians entering. But, will not hesitate to terminate the talk of bubble travel with Sinkapore
Few gahmens will take the risks.,...particularly when they have to face the people via erections
 

zhihau

Super Moderator
SuperMod
Asset
With the influx of CECA, you think our ring-fence system is water tight?
 

amransan

Alfrescian
Loyal
singapore still accepting india which india the covid is on the rise.
i hope and pray Australia goverment close the border to those countries have high number of covid like USA, india, singapore(for sg never believe what their news says), to keep the people safe.

its been 5 years since i visited my parent is sg its ok for me to wait another few more years :smile:
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Ah neh infect others in Hotel Quarantine,,,,,and ah nehs deny it? WTF?
Perth coronavirus quarantine hotel stops taking travellers after guests infected in their room
By Rhiannon Shine
Posted 1hhour ago, updated 55mminutes ago
Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.
WATCH
Duration: 1 minute 19 seconds1m 19s

Play Video. Duration: 1 minute 19 seconds

Mark McGowan says he is very worried about the COVID-19 risk from India after the new hotel cases.
Share
The West Australian Premier says Perth's Mercure Hotel will not take any new returned overseas travellers after the virus was transmitted between people in quarantine who were staying in separate rooms.
Key points:
  • Two hotel guests caught COVID-19 from a couple who returned from India
  • Other guests and staff have tested negative but will be retested
  • The Premier wants National Cabinet to consider banning Indian travel
Genome sequencing data has revealed a mother and her four-year-old child, who were returned travellers from the UK, caught the virus at the hotel from an infected couple who had returned from India and were staying in a room opposite them.
Mr McGowan said both rooms had HEPA filter air purifiers fitted in them.
He said 18 people who were on the same floor as the infected couple had since been released from quarantine.
Two of the guests, who were in adjacent rooms to the infected couple, have been asked to self-quarantine for another two weeks and get retested.
The other 16 guests were asked to get retested and self-isolate until they return a negative result.
Four of them had already received negative test results.
A further 13 security guards, 31 hotel staff, one doctor and two CCTV installers, who visited the hotel floor since April 10, will also be retested and have been asked to isolate until they get a negative result.
Hotel system 'imperfect': Premier
An independent review of WA's hotel quarantine system following a January incident of a security guard contracting the virus, which sparked a five-day lockdown, made 16 recommendations — all of which were supported by the state government.
The recommendations included improving hotel ventilation, establishing better systems for sharing data and improving risk management.
A police officer and an Australian Border Force officer stand wearing face masks outside the Mercure Hotel in Perth.

Two people were infected at the Mercure Hotel after the virus jumped from one room to another.(
ABC News: Steve Johns
)
Mr McGowan said the recommendations were being "implemented progressively".
"Health authorities are doing their best to implement his recommendations and to do it safely," he said.
He said the hotel quarantine system was "imperfect".
Read our full coverage of the coronavirus pandemic
"All health authorities and governments are still learning about everything this once-in-a-hundred-year pandemic throws up," Mr McGowan said.
"What has been tried and tested is our border controls.
"As such, I am going to raise with National Cabinet my concerns about the volume of returning Australians that have the virus and the pressure that is placing on us and our hotel quarantine system."
India travel ban proposed
Mr McGowan said people who had been in COVID-ravaged India posed a particularly high risk.
Want more WA news?
Did you know we offer a local version of the ABC News homepage? Watch below to see how you can set yours, and get more WA stories.
(Hint: You'll have to go back to the home page to do this)


How to set your state news edition(Gfycat)
"We are very concerned about India and that is why we have suggested a suspension, a reduction in the number of people returning from India should be considered, and I will be raising that with National Cabinet today," he said.
"Anecdotally, we have some evidence that people are leaving Australia and going to India and then returning COVID-positive.
"We don't know why this is happening. This does not seem fair, reasonable or sensible.
"This is under the control of the Commonwealth. These are matters we are going to raise today."
While the Mercure would no longer accept returned overseas travellers, Mr McGowan said it would be used as a dedicated quarantine hotel for low-risk seasonal workers from countries including Tonga and Vanuatu.
A flight of seasonal workers is expected to arrive in late May.
"As returned travellers continue to arrive, they will fill the other quarantine hotels in our city," Mr McGowan said.
"I want to assure people that seasonal workers from Tonga or Vanuatu come from very low-risk areas.
"This hotel will still remain under WA Health's management."
 
Top