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Serious Jialat! Taiwan also fell to Covid 19 Mutated Variant!

Pinkieslut

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COVID-19: Singapore tightens border measures with Taiwan; Singaporean, PR travellers to serve 21-day stay-home notice​

16 May 2021 12:29AM
Singapore
SINGAPORE: Singapore citizens, permanent residents and long-term pass holders with recent travel history to Taiwan will have to serve a 21-day stay-home notice, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said on Saturday (May 15) in a press release.

MOH said the measures, which take effect on May 16, 11.59pm, come in the wake of increased COVID-19 cases in Taiwan.

The stay-home notice will consist of a 14-day stay at a dedicated facility, followed by an additional seven days at their place of residence. Those returning to Singapore will also undergo COVID-19 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests on arrival, Day 14 of their stay-home notice and before the end of the 21-day period.

Previously, travellers from Taiwan had been allowed to go about their activities in Singapore without the need to serve a stay-home notice if their PCR tests were negative.

Short-term travellers holding an air travel pass with travel history to Taiwan within the last 21 days before departure for Singapore will not be allowed to enter Singapore, MOH said.

READ: Visitors with travel history to Vietnam to serve 21-day stay-home notice at dedicated facilities

Travellers who have recent travel history to Taiwan and who are not citizens or permanent residents will be required to take a PCR test within 72 hours before departure. They will need to present a valid negative COVID-19 test results in order to enter Singapore.

All visitors with recent history to Taiwan who entered Singapore between May 15 and May 16 will be subject to Government-funded COVID19 PCR tests on Day 3 and Day 7 of their arrival in Singapore, MOH said.
 

Pinkieslut

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Taiwan records 180 new cases in island’s worst Covid outbreak of pandemic​

New restrictions, including a mandate on mask-wearing and limits on gatherings in the capital, Taipei, will stay in place for two weeks​

Helen Davidson
Taiwan Health Officials Set Up Rapid COVID-19 Test Stations Following The Outbreak, Taipei - 14 May 2021Mandatory Credit: Photo by Annabelle Chih/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock (11904243b) Medical staff at the rapid COVID-19 test station in Wanhua District following the outbreak in Taipei, Taiwan on 14 May, 2021. Taiwan Health Officials Set Up Rapid COVID-19 Test Stations Following The Outbreak, Taipei - 14 May 2021

Medical staff at a rapid Covid-19 test station in Wanhua, Taipei set up after a rare outbreak.Photograph: Annabelle Chih/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock
@heldavidson
Sat 15 May 2021 07.07 BST
Last modified on Sun 16 May 2021 05.01 BST
Taiwan has reported 180 new cases of Covid-19 as it rushes to contain the worst outbreak the island has seen since the pandemic began. Authorities have raised the alert level in Taipei and the neighbouring county of New Taipei, limiting family gatherings, and ordering numerous industries to close.
Taiwan has been one of the world’s pandemic success stories, and its case numbers remain low relative to outbreaks around the world. But Saturday’s cases, which bring its total number so far to about 1,470 among a population of 24 million, mark the highest rates of community transmission since the pandemic began. Until now almost all of Taiwan’s cases were detected in new arrivals held in hotel quarantine.
Of the 180 cases, 132 were reportedly without a known source. There were 89 were recorded in Taipei city, 75 in New Taipei and the rest scattered in other counties.
The current wave is believed to have jumped to the community from staff at China Airlines and an airport quarantine hotel late last month. In the past fortnight at least 265 cases have been diagnosed – more than 77% of Taiwan’s total number of local cases since the pandemic began.
At a press conference on Saturday, Premier Su Tseng-chang and cabinet ministers announced the lifting of the alert level for Taipei and New Taipei from two to three, on a four-level scale, where four establishes a lockdown. Beginning 4pm Saturday they will remain in place until 28 May, authorities said.
According to guidelines published in local media, level 3 generally includes mandatory mask wearing in public, limits on outdoor gatherings to 10 and indoor gatherings to five, and the closure of all businesses except essential services, law enforcement, government services, and health services.
However in Saturday’s announcement, food and beverage outlets were only ordered to close if they could not fully implement customer ID registration and social distancing measures. Customers were urged to choose takeout over dining in. Weddings and funerals have not been cancelled but will require registration of attendees, and the limits on gatherings did not apply to schools or work.
Within hours of the announcement some supermarkets were mobbed by shoppers, despite no apparent suggestion that supermarkets would close. Food delivery service UberEats alerted customers it would immediately shift to contactless delivery.
Under the general guidelines, residents in neighbourhoods where community transmission has occurred - for example in Taipei’s Wanhua district which is at the centre of a major cluster - must stay within defined perimeters and comply with testing. Schools and public gatherings in the neighbourhood would also be suspended.
Residents of Wanhua, where the outbreak was originally centred around several hostess bars and tea houses linked to the sex work industry, have been reporting in droves to rapid testing clinics since Friday. Authorities have promised law enforcement has no intention of targeting sex workers or undocumented migrants.
Among Saturday’s reported cases, just 43 were in Wanhua.
The rest of Taiwan remains on alert level 2 but entertainment, beauty, fitness and leisure venues have been ordered to close and religious gatherings banned. The Taiwan-Palau travel bubble has also been suspended until 8 June, and Hong Kong has increased its quarantine requirements for anyone arriving from Taiwan.
The health minister, Chen Shih-chung, said alert level 4 would not be triggered unless there were 100 or more daily cases for 14 consecutive days, correcting an earlier statement where he said it would occur after seven.
The outbreak has caught Taiwan by surprise, after almost 18 months with no major incident. The island state established border controls early on and runs a strict hotel and home quarantine system. However like several nations in the Pacific which had similar success, the country has a low vaccination rate, at least partly due to struggles convincing its population to get vaccinated. While the rollout has prioritised vulnerable and high risk groups, in recent weeks health services have offered self-paid vaccines to the general public in order to use up doses before they expire. On Friday president Tsai Ing-wen announced Taiwan’s first locally developed vaccine would be available by July.
 

zhihau

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how long were those chaps quarantined? quarantined alone still can spread? air-borne? air-con vents? so many questions :confused::confused::confused:
 
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