tiongers dulan with ccp and fuck tiong embassy in singapore

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Raucous Crowd in Singapore Shows Anger at China Travel Rules

www.bloomberg.com

Dozens of Chinese nationals gathered outside their embassy in Singapore on Tuesday in frustration over new rules requiring them to get tested for Covid-19 before they can board their upcoming flights home, something Singapore doesn’t generally offer to those without symptoms.

“No hospital in Singapore will perform a test for me,” said a 28-year-old warehouse manager who gave his surname as Wang. He’s scheduled to fly to the western city of Chongqing at the end of the month. “Booking a flight is very tough now and I don’t want to miss my flight.”

The crowd surrounded flustered embassy officials and grew raucous, even as a police vehicle arrived. The new requirements from China, instituted after dozens of passengers from Singapore tested positive in virus tests after landing there, highlights the fragility of tentative travel arrangements established by countries to boost economic activity and help the ailing aviation industry.

It’s also a blow to Singapore’s efforts to kick start international travel amid the pandemic, fueled by its reliance on the aviation sector as an international hub. The city-state was one of the first to establish a corridor with the world’s second-biggest economy, and is negotiating arrangements with other major trade partners like Japan.

In reaction, authorities appear to have now set up testing services for those with bookings to China. On Wednesday, passengers who had booked flights to Guangzhou on Sunday turned up at a former school in the western part of Singapore to be tested. An urgent email sent by Singapore Airlines Ltd.’s Scoot the previous day told people that arrangements have been made by authorities to get tested during a one and a half hour morning time slot, and they had to pay S$186 ($136) before the results can be released to them.

Flights Suspension

In recent weeks, at least three flights departing from Singapore have hit the “circuit breaker” instituted by the Civil Aviation Administration of China, which triggers a week-long suspension of routes where five passengers onboard test positive. If 10 or more infections are found, the suspension grows to at least one month.

China Southern Airlines Co.’s flight to Guangzhou was suspended for a week after five passengers tested positive upon arrival in the southern city, the company said. Juneyao Airlines Co. also hit the circuit breaker earlier this month, forcing it to cancel its flights between Singapore and Shanghai scheduled for Friday, the company said on its official Weibo account.

Meanwhile, the only direct flight from Singapore to northern China -- operated by Scoot -- was suspended after 12 people on board tested positive upon arriving in Tianjin last week, according to a person familiar with the matter, who was not authorized to speak publicly. Scoot did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Infections or Not

Tianjin’s municipal health commission said all the 12 cases found on the Scoot flight were Chinese construction workers.

The detection of cases came even as Singaporean authorities conducted a mass testing campaign to weed out symptom-free migrant worker carriers. New infections have recently surfaced in at least one of the dormitories, though reported cases among the rest of the population hover close to zero.

Singapore’s Ministry of Health told Bloomberg that 12 cases detected on the flight were workers who have recovered but “may continue to shed viral fragments for weeks or even months,” adding that there’s no evidence people who have had the virus and recovered are infectious. It said that both countries are investigating two other cases.

Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to requests for comment while China’s foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said on Tuesday that he hadn’t seen relevant reports on the situation. Multiple calls to the news department of the Chinese embassy in Singapore were unanswered.

Infectious or not, the cases pose a challenge to Singapore’s efforts to resume travel with countries that have gotten the virus under control. From Sept. 1, New Zealanders will be allowed to enter Singapore, where they will have to take a Covid test but won’t be quarantined, though most Singaporeans aren’t allowed into New Zealand. A similar arrangement was also offered to travelers from Brunei.

Green Lanes

The situation may affect the continued operation of Singapore’s travel corridor with China, an arrangement that started in June and is termed a “green lane.” Those going through the green lane on essential or business travel can avoid the usual two weeks of quarantine upon arrival, provided they test negative before departure and upon landing. China has only agreed to two other travel corridors, with Germany and South Korea.

No flights from South Korea and Germany have been suspended since China’s aviation regulator instituted the circuit breaker in early June, though routes from places like Manila and Abu Dhabi have also triggered similar action.

The frustrated Chinese nationals gathered outside the embassy on Tuesday said that they could not get a virus test from any Singapore medical facility without displaying symptoms. Those interviewed were not traveling via the green lane and were mostly lower-wage workers prepared to undergo two weeks of quarantine upon reaching home.

Under the new rules, they won’t be able to board their flights without a negative test result.

Singapore’s health ministry said late Tuesday on its website that travelers could seek assistance in light of the new rules from China. Still, it reiterated its strategy focused on “diagnostic testing and active case finding” and that pre-departure testing is reserved for those using the green lane.

— With assistance by Alfred Cang, Dong Lyu, Philip Heijmans, and Kyunghee Park
 
Scores of China-bound Scoot and other passengers turn up at Jurong centre for compulsory Covid-19 testing, Singapore News & Top Stories

www.straitstimes.com

Scores of China-bound Scoot and other passengers turn up at Jurong centre for compulsory Covid-19 testing

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SINGAPORE - Scores of anxious passengers with a seat on China-bound flights showed up at the former Shuqun Secondary School on Wednesday morning (Aug 26) to be tested for Covid-19.

The last-minute tests come after Chinese Embassy here announced on its website last Friday that from Aug 28, all travellers from Singapore to China will have to take a Covid-19 test within five days before their flight to the country to ensure they are free of the coronavirus.

Passengers who are booked on Flight TR100 bound for Guangzhou on Aug 30 was alerted to the new requirement in an urgent e-mail sent by Scoot on Tuesday afternoon.

The e-mail added that "testing arrangements have been made by the relevant authorities and must be strictly adhered to".

Passengers on that flight were instructed to go for the test at the regional screening centre located at the former Shuqun Secondary School in Jurong East between 9am and 10.30am on Wednesday.

When The Straits Times visited the testing centre on Wednesday, more than 200 people were there waiting to be tested. Some came with their families.

The passengers had tickets on flights operated by Scoot and China Southern Airlines to various Chinese cities and had to show these to security personnel before they were allowed to be tested.

One passenger, who wanted to be known only as Mr Chen, told ST that he was supposed to fly home to Guangzhou on Flight TR100. Mr Chen, who was at the testing centre with his wife, was worried about whether the flight would go ahead on Sunday.

"This was a mess from the start. We thought we would finally be able to see our families, but our flights kept getting changed.

"Now with this testing, I'm not sure if there will be more delays," said the engineer, who is in his 40s.

The Chens said they have not seen their son in months. Speaking with tears in her eyes, Mrs Chen said: "I miss my family a lot. It has been distressing for us to not know when we can go back. I hope they will have some understanding about the difficulties we faced to even get this flight ticket."

The couple added that they had tried to book other flights home but experienced a lot of difficulty as tickets were snapped up quickly.

Singapore travellers to China must take Covid-19 test 5 days before flight from Aug 28

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Some were unhappy that the test was sprung on them.

Ms Lin Yuling, an accountant who works in Singapore, said: "We were informed late last night that this would happen...

"There were a lot more people here than expected, and we are not sure how our travel plans will be affected now."

The 36-year-old, who was planning to go to Tianjin with her husband next Sunday, added that she was told that passengers have to pay for the test, which costs $186.

According to the Scoot e-mail, passengers must pay for the test before the results can be released to them.

Scoot also said that as the test results will require a turnaround time of 48 hours, passengers must adhere to the time slot for the test to be able to receive the results in time for the flight on Aug 30.

The Chinese Embassy said on its website last Friday that it will take at least one working day for test results to be verified after passengers submit test results to the embassy via e-mail.

Passengers who test negative for the virus and have filled in a health declaration form will be issued a certified health declaration form with an official embassy seal.

The certified form is required for passengers who board flights to China.

The passengers did not have to pay on the spot at the testing centre, but had to give their banking information such as credit card details, as well as their contact information.


A woman assisting people queueing up to take a Covid-19 nucleic acid test at the former Shuqun Secondary School on Aug 26, 2020. ST PHOTO: TIMOTHY DAVID

A construction worker, who wanted to be known only as Mr Wang, said he will ask his employer for help to pay as he could not afford the test.

"Being made to pay for this test all of a sudden is an additional burden. I will ask my employer for help because it is not easy for people like us to just fork out $186," said Mr Wang, who was going home to Xi'an.

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A 23-year-old student, Mr Yu, who was planning to fly to Tianjin on Sept 2, said he was told to take the test even though his flight was cancelled.

"I spoke to a Chinese Embassy official here who apologised for the inconvenience, since we aren't even sure if we can fly back after all of this mess," he said.

"Can't we get swabbed at the airport? Why is there this mass of people gathered here? It's frustrating."
 
Cut off diplomatic ties... it's only a matter of time. :wink:
 
Steady lah you!:thumbsup: Young man like you got the stamina and strength to chiongsua while carrying GPMG.
the other one i carry is 84mm
sakti or not?

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