MOH in Cambodia to propose reopening Test & Go registration

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The Public Health Ministry plans to make a proposal to reopen registration for the Test & Go quarantine exemption scheme. Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul told Thai media today of his plan to make the proposal to the CCSA for this week’s meeting.

The proposal needs approval from the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration before travelers can register for the entry program again. The next CCSA general meeting, which is chaired by PM Prayut Chan-o-cha, is scheduled for Thursday.

Registration for entry under the Test & Go scheme was closed following the first local transmission of the Omicron variant in Thailand, but those who had previously registered have still been able to come to Thailand under the scheme. Test & Go allows vaccinated travelers to enter the country with just a minimal quarantine period, typically up to a day, while they wait for the results from an on-arrival RT-PCR test,

With the Emergency Decree put in place at the start of the pandemic still in place, the decision on the entry program, part of the Thailand Pass, is up to the CCSA. The color-coded zoning with coordinated disease control measures will also be discussed at the meeting and whether to make any revisions.

Anutin said that the Ministry of Public Health understands the economic situation and problems that all residents are facing, adding that he informed the director-general of the Department of Disease Control, Opas Karnkawinpong, that post-pandemic life should be back to normal as much as it can be.

Also, Omicron spread quickly and raise up the case but the symptom is quite mild and Thailand can handle it, the minister said. He also added that health safety was taken into account when the ministry decided to propose the resumption of the Test & Go scheme.

Thai media also asked the minister about the reopening of entertainment venues. He explained that it has to be gradually changed, especially for areas considered to be at high risk of transmissions.

Bars and nightclubs, which have been closed for 9 months due to strict disease control measures, have recently been able to apply for permission to reopen as a restaurant with those in “blue” zones allowed to serve alcohol until 9 pm.

Anutin told Thai reporters that these bars-turned-restaurants must truly operate as a restaurant, not like a pub or bar typically would. If venues do not abide by the rules, then disease control measures in the entertainment industry will not be lifted.

 

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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