Australia,
Taiwan, South Korea issue travel warnings for Singapore
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[August 30, 2016]
By Marius Zaharia
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Australia, Taiwan and
South Korea advised pregnant women and those attempting to get pregnant
to avoid travel to Singapore after an outbreak of the Zika virus
infected more than 50 people in the city-state.
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The outbreak and the warnings come as a potential blow to tourism in
one of the world's busiest travel hubs, which is already struggling
to recover from a slump amid tepid global growth.
Singapore reported its first case of locally-transmitted Zika at the
weekend, and the number of reported infections of the mosquito-borne
virus has since jumped to 56. At least three dozen of those have
since made a full recovery.
The Zika virus was detected in Brazil last year and has since spread
across the Americas. It poses a risk to pregnant women because it
can cause severe birth defects. It has been linked in Brazil to more
than 1,800 cases of microcephaly, a rare birth defect where babies
are born with abnormally small heads and brains.
The 56 confirmed cases in Singapore include only one woman.
Taiwan, Australia and South Korea advised pregnant women and those
planning pregnancy to postpone trips to Singapore. Those returning
from the country should avoid pregnancy for two months. South Korean
travelers will receive text messages with the warning when they
arrive in Singapore.
Malaysia and Indonesia, Singapore's closest neighbors, have stepped
up protective measures following the outbreak, introducing thermal
scanners at airports and border checkpoints.
Singapore's Tourism Board said it was monitoring developments,
adding the city state remained a "safe travel destination", and it
was premature to consider any impact.
More than 55 million people pass through Singapore's Changi airport
every year. In the first half of this year, tourism arrivals reached
almost 8.2 million, compared with around 7.3 million in the same
period of last year.
Online retailer Lazada Singapore said on Tuesday it has seen sales
of mosquito repellent and other deterrent products rise fivefold
over the past three days compared to a week ago.
FOREIGN WORKERS
Authorities continued to inspect thousands of homes in seven parts
of Singapore, including five foreign worker dormitories, on Tuesday.
Officials sprayed insecticide and removed potential mosquito
breeding habitats such as stagnant water and moist dirt from drains.
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The majority of those infected with Zika in Singapore were foreign
workers, but the government has not disclosed their nationalities.
The High Commission of Bangladesh, which represents the largest
community of foreign workers, said none of the workers were
Bangladeshis.
The Chinese and Myanmar embassies in Singapore said they had not
been notified by Singapore whether their citizens were among those
infected. The Thai embassy did not immediately return a call seeking
comment.
Foreign workers in Singapore, employed mostly in the construction
and marine industries, can earn as little as S$2 ($1.47) an hour,
often work 12-14 hours a day and take few days off. They are
unlikely to travel often.
The GuocoLand construction site, where the infected workers were
found, remained closed on Tuesday morning, according to a Reuters
photographer at the scene. It was ordered on Sunday to halt work and
rectify the conditions that allowed mosquitoes to breed.
Regional health experts said the Zika virus is likely to be
significantly under-reported across tropical Southeast Asia as local
health authorities fail to conduct adequate screening.
(Reporting by Marius Zaharia, with additional reporting by Edgar Su,
Aradhana Aravindan, Masayuki Kitano and Mark Tay in Singapore and
Jeong Eun Lee in Seoul; Editing by Jane Wardell and Ian Geoghegan)
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