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Foreign covid-19 cases is killing SIA and depleting Sinkie's reserves

LITTLEREDDOT

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SIA is owned by Temasek which is owned by the Ministry of Finance which is owned by Singapore citizens.

SIA passenger flights from S'pore barred from landing in HK from April 3 to 16 after detection of Covid-19 case
An SIA spokesman confirmed the flight ban but noted that passenger services from Hong Kong to Singapore are not affected.

An SIA spokesman confirmed the flight ban but noted that passenger services from Hong Kong to Singapore are not affected.PHOTO: ST FILE
kokyufengg.png

Kok Yufeng

APR 2, 2021

SINGAPORE - Singapore Airlines (SIA) flights departing from the Republic have been barred from landing in Hong Kong for two weeks.

The move comes after a transit passenger who arrived in the territory on Wednesday (March 31) tested positive for Covid-19, while three other passengers on the flight were found to have breached rules for entry to Hong Kong.

On Friday (April 2), the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) said the passenger with Covid-19 had tested negative pre-departure.

The three non-compliant passengers were also transit passengers. They had taken Covid-19 pre-departure tests at clinics in their places of origin that did not meet Hong Kong’s requirements.

SIA had breached a trigger point that Hong Kong has set whereby airlines could face suspension, the CAAS said.

Other airlines have also similarly breached the trigger points before as the Hong Kong authorities enforce them strictly, it added.

The infected passenger is a 28-year-old woman who arrived in Hong Kong from Indonesia. She was asymptomatic.

The Hong Kong government said the positive case was detected through a sample collected at the airport. Three passengers on the same flight - SQ882 from Singapore to Hong Kong - failed to comply with local Covid-19 regulations for inbound travellers.

Hong Kong’s Health Department then invoked powers under the regulations to bar the daily SIA passenger flight from Singapore to Hong Kong from April 3 to 16.

Responding to queries, it said the territory has barred airlines from landing in Hong Kong for two weeks a total of 23 times since August last year. These airlines include Hong Kong's own flag carrier Cathay Pacific, Air India and some European carriers such as British Airways.

An SIA spokesman confirmed the flight ban, but noted that passenger services from Hong Kong to Singapore are not affected.

The spokesman said SIA has taken immediate steps to strengthen checks at the point of embarkation to ensure its customers are in compliance with Hong Kong’s regulatory requirements. The airline will also assist the health authorities in contact tracing efforts related to the case.

Apologising to affected customers, SIA said it is reaching out to them to offer assistance, and minimise the inconvenience.

The flight ban comes just as talks on re-establishing a much-delayed air travel bubble between the two cities had resumed. Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung said on Monday that Singapore is studying a proposal from Hong Kong to allow quarantine-free flights.

A travel bubble between the cities was supposed to be launched last November, but was halted before the first scheduled flight when Hong Kong saw a spike in Covid-19 cases. It was pushed back twice, and remains on ice.

Aviation analysts told The Straits Times that the two-week flight ban is unlikely to have a significant impact on SIA or the proposed air travel bubble.

Mr Brendan Sobie from Sobie Aviation said it is not uncommon for Hong Kong to bar airlines over imported Covid-19 cases.

Last November, it was reported that Air India had been banned from operating flights to Hong Kong five times over a period of four months. China has also implemented similar bans, Mr Sobie said.

He added that the current flight from Singapore to Hong Kong mainly caters to transit passengers. Any flights under a proposed travel bubble would be be separate from this, so the current talks should not be impacted by the ban.

Meanwhile, SIA can continue to operate the flight and carry cargo. “Load factors are very low these days and cargo accounts for most of the revenue,” Mr Sobie said.
 
Scoot flights from S'pore barred from landing in Hong Kong for 2 weeks after 2 Covid-19 cases detected on plane
Scoot's passenger service from Hong Kong to Singapore will not be affected.

Scoot's passenger service from Hong Kong to Singapore will not be affected.
ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG
toh_ting_wei.png

Toh Ting Wei

Apr 15, 2021

SINGAPORE - Budget carrier Scoot will not be allowed to fly passengers from Singapore to Hong Kong between April 16 and 29, after two Covid-19 cases were detected on one of its flights earlier this month.

Its temporary ban by the Hong Kong authorities follows that of parent carrier Singapore Airlines (SIA), which is currently unable to fly passengers to the Chinese territory till April 17.

The Centre for Health Protection of the Department of Health in Hong Kong said in a statement on Thursday (April 15) that the Scoot flight T980 flying into the city from Singapore on April 11 had two passengers confirmed to be infected with the Covid-19 virus.

It also said that one other passenger on the flight failed to comply with health requirements.

"The (Department of Health) thus invoked the regulation to prohibit landing of passenger flights from Singapore operated by Scoot in Hong Kong from April 16 to 29," it said.

Scoot confirmed in a separate statement that it has been asked to suspend its daily passenger service from Singapore.

It added that its passenger service from Hong Kong to Singapore will not be affected.

Scoot said the two passengers flagged by the Hong Kong authorities were transfer passengers who had valid negative pre-departure Covid-19 test results. But they tested positive for the coronavirus on arrival in Hong Kong.

A third transfer passenger on board the same flight also had negative pre-departure Covid-19 test results, and tested negative for the coronavirus in Hong Kong.

"However, this passenger's test and travel visa supporting documents were found to not fully meet Hong Kong's regulatory requirements," Scoot added.

Scoot said it will work with its ground handling agents to "reinforce our protocols and staff training in conducting document checks at our departure points" to ensure that its passengers comply with all regulatory requirements.

"For affected passengers booked on TR980 departing from April 16 onward, Scoot will provide rebooking where possible or offer a full refund," said the carrier.
"Scoot sincerely apologises to our customers for the inconvenience caused."

The ban on Scoot flying into Hong Kong will start just as a similar ban on SIA ends.

SIA had been banned earlier this month after one of its passenger tested positive for Covid-19. In addition, three other passengers on the same flight were found to have breached rules for entry to Hong Kong.

The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore said then that SIA had breached a trigger point set by Hong Kong, whereby airlines could face suspension.

In an earlier update this month by the Hong Kong's Health Department, the territory has barred airlines from landing in the city 23 times since August last year.
 
Would you dare fly to Hong Kong on the same plane as transfer passengers from covid-19 infested countries?
Is 7 days' quarantine enough?

Quarantine for Covid-19 vaccinated visitors to Hong Kong, including those from S'pore, cut by 7 days
Travellers who have taken all required doses of the vaccines from low-risk areas will have to serve seven days of mandatory quarantine instead of 14.

Travellers who have taken all required doses of the vaccines from low-risk areas will have to serve seven days of mandatory quarantine instead of 14.
PHOTO: AFP
claire_huang.png

Claire Huang

Apr 15, 2021

HONG KONG - From as early as end-April or early May, fully vaccinated visitors to Hong Kong will have their mandatory quarantine reduced by seven days.

For travellers from low-risk areas including Singapore, Australia and New Zealand who have taken all required doses of the vaccines, their mandatory quarantine in designated hotels will be seven days instead of 14.

For those from high- and medium-risk areas, they will serve a 14-day quarantine instead of 21 days.

All of these inoculated visitors will have to self-monitor for another seven days after their quarantine, the Hong Kong government said in a release late on Wednesday (April 14).

The 21-day compulsory quarantine requirement for Hong Kong residents who fly back to the city from elsewhere, with the exception of China, remains.

Even as Hong Kong moves to ease quarantine measures for those inoculated, officials have tightened rules for flights to reduce the “risk of importation of mutant strain of the virus from very high-risk places”.

Starting from Wednesday, there will be a 14-day ban on any flight that has three or more confirmed cases of Covid-19, up from the previous threshold of five cases.
Cases are detected as passengers arriving in Hong Kong have to undergo mandatory tests.

The ban will also apply if two or more passengers on any two flights of the same airline from the same place to Hong Kong within a seven-day period are found to have the virus. Previously, the threshold was three infected passengers on two consecutive flights.

The 14-day flight ban also applies for another existing criteria that remains unchanged - at least one passenger confirmed to have Covid-19 by arrival test is on the same flight with one other passenger who breaches measures under the cross-boundary traveller laws.

To keep the Covid-19 variant N501Y – discovered in South Africa – out of Hong Kong as much as possible, the government said that any airline that has five confirmed cases or more of this virus variant will be banned from landing in the city for 14 days.

The government will then list the place where the plane took off from as an extremely high-risk area, which will restrict persons who have stayed in that place for more than two hours from boarding passenger flights to Hong Kong for 14 days.

The statement said the move is to prevent persons from the relevant place from arriving in Hong Kong via transit.

But once the 14-day period is over and the area is downgraded from "extremely high-risk" to “very high-risk”, visitors can enter Hong Kong again, and will have to undergo the 21-day quarantine.

The development comes as Singapore and Hong Kong are finalising the details of the travel bubble where passengers will have to get tested to take the direct flights.
Under the agreement, these visitors will not have to serve any quarantine.

In March, Hong Kong proposed that passengers intending to take the Singapore-Hong Kong bubble flights be vaccinated prior to their trip.

md-hk-150421.jpg
The development comes as Singapore and Hong Kong are finalising the details of the travel bubble.
PHOTO: REUTERS

This week, Chief Executive Carrie Lam said Hong Kong will impose the vaccination requirement on people flying out of the city on the travel bubble flights.

Hong Kong’s daily infections have tapered to low single digits, with most of the cases in recent weeks imported.

There have been more than 11,600 confirmed cases and 209 deaths so far.

Hong Kong officials, troubled with the sluggish vaccination rate, are now aggressively pushing for residents to get the jabs by lowering the age limit.

From next Friday, residents aged 16 to 29 can book appointments. Currently, only people aged 30 and above can go for the jabs.

Those aged 18 or above can choose to take either the German-made Pfizer-BioNTech or Chinese Sinovac jabs.

Those aged 16 and 17 will have to show parental consent and can only receive the Pfizer jabs.

“The expansion will cover an additional 1.08 million Hong Kong citizens, with the city’s vaccination programme now covering a total of 6.5 million people, equivalent to 88 per cent of Hong Kong’s total population,” Secretary for Civil Service Patrick Nip, who helms the voluntary inoculation drive, said on Thursday.

He said vaccination centres offering the Pfizer vaccines will stop operating by end September and that people who want this vaccine need to get their first shots by end of August. These jabs expire after four months.

More than 950,000 doses of vaccines have been administered to a population of 7.5 million.

md-hkairport-150421.jpg
Airport staff members queueing up to collect Covid-19 test kits in Hong Kong on Feb 2, 2021.
PHOTO: REUTERS

To incentivise inoculation, Mrs Lam on Monday said the government will ease social distancing measures for those who are fully vaccinated.

The move to extend dine-in services and triple the cap on number of patrons per table at an eatery where staff and customers have taken their jabs, also comes as pressure mounts on people’s livelihoods and for officials to revive the economy.

Existing measures, including mask-wearing and public gatherings of no more than four, will last till April 28.
 
Why is jb border still close but border with mumbai is wide open?
 
Scoot flights from S'pore barred from landing in Hong Kong for 2 weeks after 2 Covid-19 cases detected on plane
Scoot's passenger service from Hong Kong to Singapore will not be affected.'s passenger service from Hong Kong to Singapore will not be affected.

Scoot's passenger service from Hong Kong to Singapore will not be affected.
ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG
toh_ting_wei.png

Toh Ting Wei

Apr 15, 2021

SINGAPORE - Budget carrier Scoot will not be allowed to fly passengers from Singapore to Hong Kong between April 16 and 29, after two Covid-19 cases were detected on one of its flights earlier this month.

Its temporary ban by the Hong Kong authorities follows that of parent carrier Singapore Airlines (SIA), which is currently unable to fly passengers to the Chinese territory till April 17.

The Centre for Health Protection of the Department of Health in Hong Kong said in a statement on Thursday (April 15) that the Scoot flight T980 flying into the city from Singapore on April 11 had two passengers confirmed to be infected with the Covid-19 virus.

It also said that one other passenger on the flight failed to comply with health requirements.

"The (Department of Health) thus invoked the regulation to prohibit landing of passenger flights from Singapore operated by Scoot in Hong Kong from April 16 to 29," it said.

Scoot confirmed in a separate statement that it has been asked to suspend its daily passenger service from Singapore.

It added that its passenger service from Hong Kong to Singapore will not be affected.

Scoot said the two passengers flagged by the Hong Kong authorities were transfer passengers who had valid negative pre-departure Covid-19 test results. But they tested positive for the coronavirus on arrival in Hong Kong.

A third transfer passenger on board the same flight also had negative pre-departure Covid-19 test results, and tested negative for the coronavirus in Hong Kong.

"However, this passenger's test and travel visa supporting documents were found to not fully meet Hong Kong's regulatory requirements," Scoot added.

Scoot said it will work with its ground handling agents to "reinforce our protocols and staff training in conducting document checks at our departure points" to ensure that its passengers comply with all regulatory requirements.

"For affected passengers booked on TR980 departing from April 16 onward, Scoot will provide rebooking where possible or offer a full refund," said the carrier.
"Scoot sincerely apologises to our customers for the inconvenience caused."

The ban on Scoot flying into Hong Kong will start just as a similar ban on SIA ends.

SIA had been banned earlier this month after one of its passenger tested positive for Covid-19. In addition, three other passengers on the same flight were found to have breached rules for entry to Hong Kong.

The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore said then that SIA had breached a trigger point set by Hong Kong, whereby airlines could face suspension.

In an earlier update this month by the Hong Kong's Health Department, the territory has barred airlines from landing in the city 23 times since August last year.
Real smooth try to down play I remember ong try explain the ban was technical, you know like a technical foul. :rolleyes:
 
It would be a blessing for Sinkies shld SIA declare bankrupt, no more flights frm Ah Neh and Tiong Land.
 
HK bans incoming travellers from India. What about Singapore?

Hong Kong bans flights from India, Pakistan and the Philippines after mutant Covid-19 strain detected
The city reported 30 new coronavirus cases on April 18, 29 of which were imported.

The city reported 30 new coronavirus cases on April 18, 29 of which were imported.PHOTO: REUTERS

Apr 19, 2021



HONG KONG (REUTERS) - Hong Kong will suspend flights from India, Pakistan and the Philippines from April 20 for two weeks after the N501Y mutant Covid-19 strain was detected in the Asian financial hub for the first time, authorities said in a statement late on Sunday (April 18).
The three countries would be classified as "extremely high risk" after there had been multiple imported cases carrying the strain into Hong Kong in the past 14 days, the government said.
The city reported 30 new coronavirus cases on Sunday, 29 of which were imported, marking the highest daily toll since March 15.
Hong Kong has recorded over 11,600 cases in total and 209 deaths.
Hong Kong authorities have been urging residents to get vaccinated for coronavirus with only around 9 per cent of Hong Kong's 7.5 million residents vaccinated so far.
The government last week widened the city's vaccine scheme to include those aged between 16 to 29 years old for the first time, as they aim to boost lacklustre demand for inoculations amongst residents.

Airlines impacted by Hong Kong's ban on travellers from India, Pakistan and the Philippines include carriers such as Cathay Pacific, Hong Kong Airlines, Vistara and Cebu Pacific.
 
Flashback to early 2020. The pappies (via Sumiko the presstitute) were already tooting their own horn for a job well done. :biggrin:

suntimes-2-feb-2020-pb4---singapore-well-prepared-to-fight-the-wuhan-virus.png
 
Typical totalitarian shithole, micromanaging every aspect of Sinkies' lives.

Better advise Sinkies on 'safe management practices' when they do sexercise on their beds too. :rolleyes:

Updated-17-May_Etiquette-for-Exercising-in-Common-Spaces.jpg
 
They want to be buried with ceca. Wish granted. New zealand also banned all shitskins. So did aussielanda? Any locals want to feedback?
 
Pro Ceca dick Calvin Cheng should go stand at the arrival hall every day and hold a welcome placard for his favourite Ceca Kelings.
 
I think all the SIA Managers & above rank, up til CEO/Chairman ...
Must freeze their salary & bonus until covid pandemic is over.
Instead just collect nominal monthly $2000.
They must display their willingness to stand with the Company during such difficult times.
 
Pro Ceca dick Calvin Cheng should go stand at the arrival hall every day and hold a welcome placard for his favourite Ceca Kelings.
He will be jumping with joy on seeing Ah Nehs at the Arrival Counter.He will cry uncontrollably thinking of his days without Ah Nehs.
 
I think all the SIA Managers & above rank, up til CEO/Chairman ...
Must freeze their salary & bonus until covid pandemic is over.
Instead just collect nominal monthly $2000.
They must display their willingness to stand with the Company during such difficult times.
In b4 disGraceFu say "what if cannot attract these talents back again when air travel resumes..."
 
Pro Ceca dick Calvin Cheng should go stand at the arrival hall every day and hold a welcome placard for his favourite Ceca Kelings.
They can do SHN at his home too!
 
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