Hong Kong cuts ban time for airlines to seven days

 

Bloomberg

Hong Kong has cut the time airlines are banned for carrying excessive numbers of Covid-positive passengers to seven days from two weeks.
The circuit-breaker mechanism that bans airlines if they carried four cases or more travellers from the same airport of origin within a week has been deleted, according to a statement released by the government.
Under the revised rules, most other existing triggers remain.
Bans can be meted out if three or more Covid cases are found on the same flight, or one confirmed infection and another non-compliant one are discovered.
“On the premise of continuing the measures to guard against the importation of cases, the government requires that all airlines must stringently enforce the boarding
requirements for inbound travellers, so as to reduce the risk of importation of cases as far as practicable,” the government said in a statement. “And will continue to impose the flight suspension mechanism against specific non-compliant routes based on the streamlined triggering criteria.”
The revised airline rules kicks on April 1 on the day rules lifting a flight ban on nine countries, and a halving of quarantine from 14 to seven days is implemented.
The city’s flagship carrier Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd said it would only schedule one flight per route every 14 days for the nine countries whose flight bans were lifted on concern the mechanism could be triggered.
The Hong Kong government also announced the implementation of a special Covid screening arrangement starting from March 29. Travellers will be subject to an additional rapid polymerase chain reaction-based nucleic acid test at the airport before they can check in for flights to China.

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