Categories: News

Health D-G: Malaysia in talks with Singapore and Brunei for COVID-19 express lanes

Malaysia is negotiating with neighbours Singapore and Brunei for freer movement between the countries to mitigate the economic harm from border controls introduced to contain Covid-19, according to Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah.

The Health director-general told Bloomberg in an interview that Malaysia has also tapped countries with low Covid-19 cases such as Australia and New Zealand for possible participation in the scheme to establish “green lanes” with fewer restrictions for their citizens.

Currently, countries still impose a mandatory quarantine period for non-citizen arrivals.

“This is in planning but we have not allowed any country yet,” Dr Noor Hisham was quoted as saying.

“It must be mutual; some issues must be ironed out by both countries before we can allow the green lane or green bubble.”

International travel remains one of the biggest risks to countries’ efforts against Covid-19, as demonstrated recently in New Zealand.

The country’s elation in becoming completely free of Covid-19 earlier this month lasted only days before two visitors from the UK reintroduced the virus there.

New Zealand now has 16 active cases and has begun introducing stricter border controls.

On June 19, Senior Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob said Malaysia has provisionally approved automatic entry for Singaporean nationals without requiring Covid-19 testing or quarantine provided this was reciprocated.

However, Singapore Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said this week that his country preferred a gradual return to cross-border movement with Malaysia.

Commuting between Malaysia and Singapore is important to both countries’ economies.

While Dr Noor Hisham previously advocated strongly for strict border controls, he conceded that a return to some normalcy for visitor arrivals was essential to the country’s economic recovery.

Malaysia has also agreed to a partial resumption of medical tourism but was limiting this to only patients with critical illnesses.

The economic toll of measures taken to contain Covid-19 in Malaysia was already manifest, with unemployment spiking in the months the movement control order was strictest while surveys have also reported significant disruptions to work life and pay levels in the country.

Yesterday, the World Bank projected that Malaysia’s economy would contract 3.1 per cent this year versus last year’s 4.3 per cent growth, effectively a 7.4 percentage point swing towards the negative.

“If we can handle the pandemic as soon as possible, then the economy can actually continue and livelihoods can continue,” Dr Noor Hisham said.

Yesterday, the Health D-G reported six more Covid-19 cases in the country for a total of 8,606 on record. Five of the six were imported. — Malay Mail

Related reading

Recent Posts

Gentari turns on DC Charger at Petronas Ayer Keroh 3

If you need to charge your EV while entering or exiting Melaka via Ayer Keroh…

34 minutes ago

Boomicaj deploys 40kW DC Charger at Lotus’s Jenjarom, priced from RM0.88 per kWh

Boomicaj, a relatively new Charge Point Operator (CPO), has deployed the first public DC Charger…

1 day ago

Shell Recharge turns on 180kW DC Charger at Shell Duta Toll Plaza Northbound

For those heading up north or towards Klang from Jalan Duta, there's now a high-powered…

2 days ago

JomCharge offers 50% off for EV Charging at these TTDI locations

JomCharge and DBKL continue to deploy more street-level EV chargers around TTDI and one of…

3 days ago

U Mobile brings indoor ULTRA5G coverage to Bangsar Village malls and BSC

U Mobile has expanded its own 5G network coverage in Bangsar, bringing indoor connectivity to…

3 days ago

BMW iX1 eDrive20L M Sport: The first BMW EV with long-wheelbase in Malaysia, priced at RM255k est

Revealed alongside the CKD version of the BMW i5 eDrive 40 M Sport Pro, the…

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.