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[Sg] - Angmoh man and his husband lost $26k begging Singapore Airport staff in vain for a Covid test

UltimaOnline

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
A Christmas Day reunion ended in tatters after an Robert Layfield (left) and Mark Donnelly (right) were stranded in Singapore Airport by Covid red tape for two days with their twin sons Mitchell and Caleb before being forced to fly home




The four were forced to sleep in the transit lounge seats while they waited out the nightmare, with the stress inflaming Mitchell's autism and Mr Layfield's multiple sclerosis




The family were forced to give up and had to fly home on Friday, arriving back at dawn on Christmas Day (pictured, Robert Layfield on the  flight home)




The family are now just hoping Jetstar and British Airways took pity on them to at least give them flights later in the year, but have given up hope of a refund




A UK Christmas Day reunion ended in tatters after an Australian family were stranded in Singapore Airport by Covid red tape for two days before being forced to fly home.

Mark Donnelly, 43, his husband Robert Layfield, 35, and their twin sons Mitchell and Caleb, 12, should have been in London with relatives for the festive season.

They'd been planning to see Mark's 89-year-old grandma Joyce after Robert lost his elderly grandmother to Covid earlier this year and then his grandfather soon after.

But instead they spent the last two days begging Singapore Airport staff in vain for a Covid test to let them carry on their journey.

Now they have lost around $26,000 in flights and accommodation - and have no hope of getting a refund.

'It's not about the money though,' Mark told Daily Mail Australia. 'We just really wanted to see our family. I've not seen my grandmother in three years.'

The family flew out of Melbourne Airport on Wednesday afternoon on Jetstar to Singapore, with a British Airways flight booked to take them on to the UK.

They had checked with the British High Commission that they only needed a recent PCR or rapid antigen test to get into the country.

But when they arrived in Singapore, airport staff refused to let them carry on with their journey because their negative rapid antigen tests, which they'd videoed themselves taking, were not carried out and certified by a health professional.

Pleas for the tests to be repeated at the airport's in-house testing clinic were repeatedly denied, despite the help of British and Australian High Commission staff.

The four were forced to sleep in the transit lounge seats while they waited out the nightmare, with the stress inflaming Mitchell's autism and Mr Layfield's multiple sclerosis.

Hardly anything was allowed to open in the transit lounge because of Covid and the Christmas holidays.

And from Wednesday lunchtime until Saturday morning, they only had the clothes they were wearing and the few possessions they'd packed in their carry-on holdalls.

When they begged for access to their checked in baggage for vital medication, they were given just five minutes under security escort to access their suitcases.

Singapore finally said they were 'inadmissable travellers' on Friday and kicked them out of the country back to Australia.

They were forced to give up and had to fly home that evening, arriving back at dawn on Christmas Day to an empty house and no festive cheer.

'Luckily we had forgotten to throw out a litre of milk and loaf of bread before we left,' said Mr Donnelly, a primary school teacher from Keysborough, Melbourne.

'So we had cheese on toast and beans with a cup of tea for our Christmas dinner.'

He said they were exhausted by the ordeal and were now just hoping Jetstar and British Airways took pity on them to at least give them flights later in the year.

'It's been terrible, to be honest,' said Mr Donnelly. 'Now we're back home - with our own bed to sleep in again at least - we're in better spirits.

'But it's been awful. We didn't even know if we'd have to go into hotel quarantine as our last PCR tests had expired by the time we got back to Melbourne.

'Luckily though we got waved through arrivals and then we went straight to a testing clinic in Dandenong to get tested before we spent Christmas in isolation at home.

'It's been devastating.'

Aviation sources said checks should have been made that family were complying with the Covid requirements of all countries they were transferring through before being allowed to board.

But Jetstar insisted: 'The customers provided evidence of a negative rapid antigen test.

'However transit in Singapore requires that test to be administered by a trained professional. Video of self swabs are not permitted.'

A spokesman added: 'We appreciate this is an extremely difficult situation and our team is doing everything we can to assist them.'


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ort-DAYS-test-rule-Christmas-trip-London.html
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Welcome to Singapore! Hope you faggots enjoy your stay in VTL paradise! Remember to practise Safe Entry when you bugger the shit out of each other! :cool:

odbr526l35481.jpg
 

LexLuthor

Alfrescian
Loyal
Welcome to Singapore! Hope you faggots enjoy your stay in VTL paradise! Remember to practise Safe Entry when you bugger the shit out of each other! :cool:

odbr526l35481.jpg

Will Government force them to tattoo a QR code on their backside for Safe Entry purposes ?
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
want to open big big do this kind of thing. how difficult is it to let them do a pcr or art test in the airport? fucking inflexible and moronic

Inflexible and moronic... sounds exactly like rat-face Ong Ye Kung. :wink:
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
A Christmas Day reunion ended in tatters after an Robert Layfield (left) and Mark Donnelly (right) were stranded in Singapore Airport by Covid red tape for two days with their twin sons Mitchell and Caleb before being forced to fly home




The four were forced to sleep in the transit lounge seats while they waited out the nightmare, with the stress inflaming Mitchell's autism and Mr Layfield's multiple sclerosis's autism and Mr Layfield's multiple sclerosis




The family were forced to give up and had to fly home on Friday, arriving back at dawn on Christmas Day (pictured, Robert Layfield on the  flight home)




The family are now just hoping Jetstar and British Airways took pity on them to at least give them flights later in the year, but have given up hope of a refund




A UK Christmas Day reunion ended in tatters after an Australian family were stranded in Singapore Airport by Covid red tape for two days before being forced to fly home.

Mark Donnelly, 43, his husband Robert Layfield, 35, and their twin sons Mitchell and Caleb, 12, should have been in London with relatives for the festive season.

They'd been planning to see Mark's 89-year-old grandma Joyce after Robert lost his elderly grandmother to Covid earlier this year and then his grandfather soon after.

But instead they spent the last two days begging Singapore Airport staff in vain for a Covid test to let them carry on their journey.

Now they have lost around $26,000 in flights and accommodation - and have no hope of getting a refund.

'It's not about the money though,' Mark told Daily Mail Australia. 'We just really wanted to see our family. I've not seen my grandmother in three years.'

The family flew out of Melbourne Airport on Wednesday afternoon on Jetstar to Singapore, with a British Airways flight booked to take them on to the UK.

They had checked with the British High Commission that they only needed a recent PCR or rapid antigen test to get into the country.

But when they arrived in Singapore, airport staff refused to let them carry on with their journey because their negative rapid antigen tests, which they'd videoed themselves taking, were not carried out and certified by a health professional.

Pleas for the tests to be repeated at the airport's in-house testing clinic were repeatedly denied, despite the help of British and Australian High Commission staff.

The four were forced to sleep in the transit lounge seats while they waited out the nightmare, with the stress inflaming Mitchell's autism and Mr Layfield's multiple sclerosis.

Hardly anything was allowed to open in the transit lounge because of Covid and the Christmas holidays.

And from Wednesday lunchtime until Saturday morning, they only had the clothes they were wearing and the few possessions they'd packed in their carry-on holdalls.

When they begged for access to their checked in baggage for vital medication, they were given just five minutes under security escort to access their suitcases.

Singapore finally said they were 'inadmissable travellers' on Friday and kicked them out of the country back to Australia.

They were forced to give up and had to fly home that evening, arriving back at dawn on Christmas Day to an empty house and no festive cheer.

'Luckily we had forgotten to throw out a litre of milk and loaf of bread before we left,' said Mr Donnelly, a primary school teacher from Keysborough, Melbourne.

'So we had cheese on toast and beans with a cup of tea for our Christmas dinner.'

He said they were exhausted by the ordeal and were now just hoping Jetstar and British Airways took pity on them to at least give them flights later in the year.

'It's been terrible, to be honest,' said Mr Donnelly. 'Now we're back home - with our own bed to sleep in again at least - we're in better spirits.

'But it's been awful. We didn't even know if we'd have to go into hotel quarantine as our last PCR tests had expired by the time we got back to Melbourne.

'Luckily though we got waved through arrivals and then we went straight to a testing clinic in Dandenong to get tested before we spent Christmas in isolation at home.

'It's been devastating.'

Aviation sources said checks should have been made that family were complying with the Covid requirements of all countries they were transferring through before being allowed to board.

But Jetstar insisted: 'The customers provided evidence of a negative rapid antigen test.

'However transit in Singapore requires that test to be administered by a trained professional. Video of self swabs are not permitted.'

A spokesman added: 'We appreciate this is an extremely difficult situation and our team is doing everything we can to assist them.'


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ort-DAYS-test-rule-Christmas-trip-London.html
We are homophobic. Eeeeee AIDS!!!
 

countryman

Alfrescian
Loyal
Where did they get the info that they were allowed to do self swab ART? Only got themselves to blame!
Jetstar Australia should have checked 1st that everything was in order before they were allowed to board the flight to SG...
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Why are self confessed faggots allowed into the country in the first place? Instead of being evicted from Singapore they should have been arrested under Section 377A of the penal code and thrown in prison for their crimes.

Singapore seems to have gone soft over the issue of unnatural sex no pun intended. It's about time the country hardened its enforcement of this dastardly crime.

https://sso.agc.gov.sg/Act/PC1871?ProvIds=pr377A-

Outrages on decency
377A. Any male person who, in public or private, commits, or abets the commission of, or procures or attempts to procure the commission by any male person of, any act of gross indecency with another male person, shall be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to 2 years.
 
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