“We will monitor the situation and we will review and assess whether or not there will be any changes,” said Lawrence Wong, the minister who co-chairs the Singapore government’s virus taskforce. Singapore and Hong Kong authorities remain in contact, he said.
The growing cluster in Singapore, which recorded its first coronavirus-related fatality in nearly two months at the weekend, underscores the fragility of travel agreements in the face of highly transmissible variants. The Hong Kong-Singapore accord, which had already been delayed several times due to infection outbreaks, includes a clear threshold on the number of linked local cases before the corridor is suspended.
In Hong Kong, Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development, Edward Yau, said late Tuesday the government is watching the outbreak in Singapore, though he said the number of cases is “by and large” within the agreed range.
According to the terms of the agreement, the travel bubble will be closed for two weeks if the seven-day moving average of the daily number of unlinked local cases is more than five in either Singapore or Hong Kong.
‘More Infectious’
All of the five new cases Singapore reported Tuesday are tied to a growing cluster at a large public hospital that stands at 40 and are linked to the India variant. These mutations are outracing vaccination progress in many places across the world, threatening to extend the pandemic. “They are more infectious, they are causing larger clusters than before,” said Wong.
We have tried our best to ringfence the cases through contact-tracing, but we must assume that there are still hidden cases out there in the community.Lawrence Wong
Work Restrictions
From May 8 to May 30, group gatherings in Singapore must be cut from a maximum of eight people to five, the Ministry of Health said Tuesday. At workplaces, no more than 50% of staff who are able to work from home can return to offices, down from the previous 75% limit.
Traveler quarantine from May 8 will be boosted to 21 days from the current 14, except for a small group of lower-risk places including Australia, Brunei Darussalam, China, New Zealand, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau, the ministry said.