Travelers
are hiding their coronavirus infections-and airlines can do little about it
People infected with coronavirus were allowed to board aircraft and travel to
Hong Kong in recent days, highlighting the challenge of controlling the
pandemic at the same time governments seek the safest ways to reopen borders.
Hong Kong's health authority said one infected passenger arrived Sunday from
Manila on a Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. flight, and another was on a Cathay
Dragon flight from Kuala Lumpur. Both were diagnosed with Covid-19 before they
traveled. It also said 45 passengers on Emirates flights from Dubai over the
weekend either were confirmed or probable cases. The airline only restarted
flights to Hong Kong this month.
The infections underscore the risk of peeling back restrictions while the
global pace of infections keeps accelerating. Airlines worldwide, largely
propped up by government bailouts, have been lobbying to get their planes back
in the air as they face more than $84 billion in losses this year.
The International Air Transport Association, which represents almost 300
airlines, in May recommended steps to protect passengers and crew from
infection, such as temperature checks at the airport and wearing face masks on
the plane.
But the Hong Kong cases show that infected passengers can bypass voluntary
requirements, and there's little airlines can do.
"Taking temperatures and having passengers wear masks on flights are steps
we can do to ensure the virus doesn't spread," Korean Air Lines Co. said
in a statement. "For measures to be put in place to ensure infected
passengers don't fly, it has to be done by the authorities and it's not
something an airline like us can do on our own."
IATA last week outlined recommendations for Covid-19 testing, saying it ideally
would be done before arriving at the airport and within 24 hours of travel. If
testing is required during the travel process, it should be done at departure,
and governments would need to mutually recognize test results, IATA said.
Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection said the 30 new cases on Monday and 16
on Tuesday all had a travel history during the incubation period. The passenger
flying on Cathay Flight 906 from Manila, a 58-year-old man, tested positive in
the Philippines on Saturday, the day before he arrived.
Cathay said it learned about the passenger from health authorities after the
plane landed. The airline is following "prescribed procedures in
conducting disinfection of aircraft and informing the operating crew and
employees," as well as helping to trace those who were in close contact
with the man.
A spokesman for the Philippine Immigration Bureau said it wasn't the agency's
job to check health clearances.
"We only check the passport and boarding" pass, spokesman Melvin Mabulac
said.
The passenger on Cathay Dragon Flight 734 was a 39-year-old woman returning
from India via Malaysia, Hong Kong's health department said Tuesday. After
landing, she declared she'd tested positive and had been treated for the virus
in India last month.
The Centre for Health Protection, which advises against all non-essential
travel outside Hong Kong, said it is in contact with authorities in the
Philippines and India to obtain more information about the cases.
The Hong Kong arrivals aren't likely to be isolated cases. While some
countries, including Australia, have said their borders are likely to be
effectively closed for the rest of the year, others -- including members of the
European Union -- are working on allowing more international flights.
Biogen Inc. said in March it fired a female worker who returned to China from
Massachusetts without disclosing her infection. Local media said the
37-year-old took a large dose of anti-fever medication before she boarded to
hide her illness.
JetBlue Airways Corp. banned a passenger who flew from New York to Florida and
notified the crew after landing that he had tested positive for coronavirus,
CNN said in March.
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