lördag 29 maj 2021

“ INTRESSANT...???” Pattaya plans to welcome back foreign tourists without quarantine requirements in the fourth quarter of this year, but visitors MUST have health checks every 7-days. Bangkok Jack


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Pattaya plans to welcome back foreign tourists without quarantine requirements in the fourth quarter of this year, but visitors MUST have health checks every 7-days.

Pattaya mayor Sontaya Kunplome on Wednesday chaired a meeting to outline his dystopian vision called 'Pattaya, Move on,' which he claims is a plan to fully reopen to foreign tourists in the fourth quarter.

But this can only happen after more than two-thirds of local residents and workers in the local service sector are vaccinated against the coronavirus.

Present at the meeting were Pattaya City executives, the head of the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT)'s Pattaya branch, the Tourism Council of Chon Buri, the Thai Hotels Association's Eastern Chapter, and the Pattaya Business and Tourism Association.

The Mayor has listed his demands in the Bangkok Post as follows;

"Under the project, foreign tourists who have received two vaccine doses will be allowed to enter Pattaya without the need to quarantine for 14 days, though they must stay in Bang Lamung and Sattahip districts for seven days before being allowed to travel elsewhere," Mr Sontaya said.

He said tourists must come from countries considered low risk by the Public Health Ministry, and they must receive vaccines — endorsed by their countries — no more than one year before travelling to Pattaya.

Tourists from Germany and Russia will be among those targeted, he said.

For children aged below 12, they must be tested for Covid-19 72 hours before travelling and have Covid-19-free certificates, Mr Sontaya said.

Tourists must stay at hotels that have Safety & Health Administration [SHA] hygienic standards certification, and they can use services and engage in activities in areas designated by the hotels, he said.

They will also be required to report to health authorities via a tracking application every seven days during their stay, Mr Sontaya said.

The "Pattaya, Move on" project will be implemented under standard operating procedures (SOP) for international arrivals, such as Covid-19 testing and guidelines for sealed routes, Mr Sontaya said.

He said he also discussed with Thosaporn Sirisamphand, head of the prime minister's advisory team and chairman of the TAT's board a plan to procure more vaccine doses to cover at least 70% of local residents in Chon Buri.

The proposals will be presented to the Public Health Ministry before being forwarded to the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration for approval next month, Mr Sontaya said.

This all sounds like a fun trip to Pattaya, a queue of ONE must already be forming somewhere in the world.


The Thai Enquirer reported yesterday that the Thai government appears to be trying to scrimp and save on their vaccine costs by stretching their supplies to, possibly, unsafe levels. Bangkok Jack

 Is Thailand 'watering down' the vaccine dose?

The Thai Enquirer reported yesterday that the Thai government appears to be trying to scrimp and save on their vaccine costs by stretching their supplies to, possibly, unsafe levels

Thai Enquirer – 24/5/21 – Why is Thailand squeezing two more doses out of a vaccine bottle when the global standard is one extra dose per bottle?

This is just one of the many doubts that Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul has created after he told agencies to try to get two more doses out of each vail.

It is not just that the practice is not being done elsewhere around the world, it is that the move reeks of desperation.

The head of immunization at Public Health England, Dr Mary Ramsay, was very happy in January when they found out that it is possible to get an extra dose out of AstraZeneca's vails.

No where else, except in Thailand and in South Korea, are they trying to squeeze two extra doses out of the same bottle.

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency also said they will not make the extraction of the extra doses a new standard or mandatory as it can burden the healthcare workers on site.

Eom Joong-sik, a professor of infectious diseases at South Korea's Gachon University Gil Medical Center, told Reuters in March that there is a risk of contamination during inaccurate extraction of the extra doses.

Yet Thailand's Ministry of Public Heath is so confident it can extract two.

The truth of the matter is, we are trying to get extra doses out of these bottles because our vaccine program has been a complete failure. And people are dying because of it.

Not only has our vaccine program been a complete failure but our vaccination policy is quickly shaping up to be a failure as well with competing messages from various organs of the government.

Instead of trying to cut corners on vaccines, the government should instead accelerate their vaccine plans. – By Erich Parpart, Thai Enquirer



Dr Yong: You can't eradicate Covid - virologist compares three strains for Thailand's three waves. Thai Visa


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Picture: Daily News

 

Top virologist Dr Yong Poovorawan of Chulalongkorn University went on his personal Facebook page to expound his views on the pandemic in Thailand. 

 

He said that the first wave was the Chinese version of the virus. Testing revealed not much quantity of virus. 

 

Consequently it was relatively easily contained in Thailand. 

 

In December came what he called the "G" strain that came from migrants from neighboring countries. 

 

There was more quantity but it could still be contained. 

 

Now since the end of march Thailand was dealing with the UK variant and that was an entirely different kettle of fish.

 

Huge numbers of the virus were present in throat swabs and it was spreading fast and easily in places like families.

 

This was not under control in Thailand.

 

He stressed that the virus could not be eradicated, reported Daily News.

 

The best that could be achieved was herd immunity through vaccination. 

 

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Upprörda känslor när Thailand blev beskyllda för att ha ”ett eget” Covid19

Malaysian PM declares 'total lockdown' Two-week nationwide shutdown from Tuesday a desperate bid to get Covid under control. Bangkok Post

Malaysian PM declares 'total lockdown'

Two-week nationwide shutdown from Tuesday a desperate bid to get Covid under control

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A boy and his father wait for tests at a free coronavirus testing site in Shah Alam, on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, on Thursday. (Reuters Photo)
A boy and his father wait for tests at a free coronavirus testing site in Shah Alam, on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, on Thursday. (Reuters Photo)

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin has announced a nationwide "total lockdown" starting on Tuesday as coronavirus infections in the country surged to record levels.

Muhyiddin said the stricter lockdown from June 1 to 14 was for all social and economic sectors, and that only essential services would remain in operation.

The government will soon announce an aid package to companies and people affected by the new restrictions, according to the statement from the Prime Minister's Office (PMO).

The spread of Covid-19 in the country in recent weeks has been more severe, partly due to highly transmissible coronavirus variants. Hospitals are also strained.

"With the latest rise in daily cases showing a drastically upward trend, hospital capacity across the country to treat Covid-19 patients are becoming limited," Muhyiddin said in a statement on Friday.

"The government will ensure the public healthcare system will not collapse and a variety of support and help will be given to the Health Ministry to increase the capacity of hospitals nationwide," the PMO statement said.

"The government will also increase vaccinations in the coming weeks in efforts to create herd immunity."

Malaysia reported 8,290 new coronavirus cases on Friday, its fourth straight day of record infections, bringing the total number of cases to 549,514 since the pandemic began.

It also reported 61 deaths. The number of daily fatalities have been rising, with a record daily toll of 63 earlier this week.

Malaysia has started its inoculation drive, though critics say the rollout has been slow. About 2.7 million people — 8.4% of the population of 32 million — have received at least one dose of a vaccine as of Thursday.

If the country can reduce the number of cases in the first two weeks of the lockdown, the government will allow some sectors to reopen slowly over the course of next four weeks - after which all economic sectors would be allowed to operate, the prime minister said.

Malaysia has already disbursed over 300 billion ringgit ($72.6 billion) of stimulus funds since last year to cushion the impact of the pandemic.

The country also remains under a state of emergency imposed in January to curb the spread of the virus. The order includes a suspension of parliament and has essentially put an end to political activities amid a power struggle.

The economy was on the path to recovery in the first quarter before infections began to spike. GDP contracted 5.6% in 2020, the worst annual performance since the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98.  


🔴 BREAKING: 34 deaths and 4,803 cases (* 2,702 from prisons) on Saturday. Full update at 12:30pm. 23 May: 3,382 - 17 dead 24 May: 2,713 - 30 dead 25 May: 3,226 - 26 dead 26 May: 2,455 - 41 dead 27 May: 3,323 - 47 dead 28 May: 3,759 - 34 dead 29 May: 4,803 - 34 dead <— TODAY. Richard Barrow

 



Southeast Asia on Friday reported its highest number of new Covid-19 cases and deaths in over two weeks. The Nation

 


The country must ensure tourists do not have to worry about Covid-19 infections while visiting Thailand for its reopening plan to work, says the Tourism and Sports Ministry. Bangkok Post

Heinecke urges eased quarantine

The country must ensure tourists do not have to worry about Covid-19 infections while visiting Thailand for its reopening plan to work, says the Tourism and Sports Ministry.

A mostly empty Suvarnabhumi airport on May 9.

"At least 70% of the population in each destination has to be vaccinated to prevent tourists from being exposed to the virus. Spread to tourists would destroy our reputation," said Phiphat Ratchakitprakarn, the tourism and sports minister.

The country plans to gradually reopen for tourism with the Phuket sandbox model on July 1.

Even though the government has committed to rolling out mass vaccinations in Bangkok, Pathum Thani, Nonthaburi and Samut Prakan from June to July, these areas are not expected to reopen for tourism until Oct 1. He said Bangkok might achieve herd immunity in July, but the city has to be certain about safe conditions before reopening.

Mr Phiphat said the government may restart its visa on arrival service for low-risk countries in the fourth quarter at the earliest. Thailand is awaiting word from the Chinese government on its travel policy.

In a related event on Thursday, Minor International (MINT) encouraged the government to restart the tourism industry by offering nationwide quarantine-free entry for vaccinated tourists who test negative.

In an open letter to Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, William Heinecke, MINT founder and chairman, said quarantine-free entry should not be limited to specific areas because vaccinated tourists from low-risk countries who test negative, wear face masks, and are tracked present a much lower risk of transmission and should be able to travel freely.

A 14-day quarantine period is unwarranted as there is no report indicating easing quarantine to 7-10 days has caused a new outbreak, said Mr Heinecke. The new wave most likely emerged from local transmission.

"Any quarantine requirement for travellers will make Thailand uncompetitive against other tourism destinations that allow convenient entry," he said.

The Foreign Ministry should work on travel agreements with countries with low to moderate risk for quarantine-free entry, said Mr Heinecke. He said a clear system for vaccine passports must be immediately established along with the reintroduction of visa exemptions to make travel easier.

The mass vaccination scheme for residents should be accelerated and embassies should provide vaccines for their citizens abroad, said Mr Heinecke. The Thai government should procure sufficient vaccines from multiple sources, he said.

Chamnan Srisawat, president of the Tourism Council of Thailand, said fully reopening the country to inoculated travellers would help restart tourism, but the country has to create herd immunity to gain the confidence of tourists and preserve local sentiment towards foreign arrivals.

"We have to be safe first before deciding to reopen the whole country," said Sisdivachr Cheewarattanaporn, head of the Association of Thai Travel Agents.





Over 22,000 inmates in Thailand found infected with COVID-19 - Xinhua | English.news.cn



Over 22,000 inmates in Thailand found infected with COVID-19

BANGKOK, May 28 (Xinhua) -- Over 22,000 inmates in prisons in Thailand have so far been confirmed to be infected with COVID-19, said a government official on Friday.

According to Veerakit Harnpariphan, deputy director general of the Department of Corrections under the Thai Ministry of Justice, a total of 22,101 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19 in 15 prisons located in the capital Bangkok and other areas.

Of them, 15,445 people are currently being treated in hospitals and field hospitals, Veerakit said.

Thailand on Friday reported 3,759 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 34 new fatalities, bringing the total tally to 144,976 cases with 954 deaths.

Center for COVID-19 Situation Administration (CCSA) spokeswoman Apisamai Srirangsan said that of the new infections, 18 were imported and 3,741 were locally transmitted including 1,294 detected in prisons. Enditem



Bangkok Post highlights 29/5

 

fredag 28 maj 2021

Thailand har 73 provinser...

 


Chonburi announces 42 new cases of Covid-19 with one death Friday, 28 May 2021, 10:51. Pattaya News



Chonburi –

The Chonburi Department of Public Health announced 42 new and confirmed cases of Covid-19 with one new death today (May 28th).

This makes a total of 4,437 cases of Covid-19 in the current round of infections, with 886 still in medical care, with a total of 22 recorded deaths in Chonburi since the start of this recent round of infections in early April. One additional death was announced today although details were not released.

Additionally, 3,529 people in total have now been released from medical care and fully recovered since this current wave began. 53 people were released yesterday.

The district-level new cases were as follows today: Mueang Chonburi with 6, Si Racha 25, Banglamung (including Pattaya) 5, Pan Thong 3 and three patients were transferred from another province to Chonburi for medical care.

The details on today's cases given were:

  1. Cluster at the Celeres company factory in Mueang Chonburi, 1 case
  2. Contact with a previous confirmed cases in Rayong, 1 case
  3. Staffers at a vegetable shop at Rattanakorn Market in Si Racha5 cases
  4. Contact with previous confirmed cases in Chachoengsao, 2 cases
  5. Contact from previous confirmed cases from Celeres company, 1 case
  6. Contact from previous confirmed cases from Okumura metal factory, 2 cases
  7. Migrant worker camp cluster in Si Racha, 9 cases
  8. Contact from previous confirmed cases
  • In families, 5 cases
  • In workplaces, 5 cases
  1. A close contact under investigation, 1 case
  2. Being investigated, 9 cases

In the last day, a total 213 close contacts were tested from contact tracing, and 1,179 people were tested in proactive testing when medical staff goes out into the community. All are pending results.

Public health officials continue to urge people to not socialize outside of their direct household until the situation improves. Most cases have come from small social gatherings according to authorities.



Covid19 Thailand 28 maj.

 


“Covilo is an inactivated vaccine that has been developed by Sinopharm’s subsidiary Beijing Institute of Biological Product Ltd,” said FDA secretary-general Paisan Dankhum. “It has also been included in the World Health Organisation [WHO]'s Emergency Use Listing,” he said, adding that two doses of Covilo are required at an interval of 28 days. The Nation

Sinopharm vaccine approved for use in Thailand

Sinopharm's Covilo vaccine has been approved for emergency use in Thailand, with Bio Genetech Ltd registered as importer, the Thai Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced on Friday.

Sinopharm vaccine approved for use in Thailand

"Covilo is an inactivated vaccine that has been developed by Sinopharm's subsidiary Beijing Institute of Biological Product Ltd," said FDA secretary-general Paisan Dankhum.

"It has also been included in the World Health Organisation [WHO]'s Emergency Use Listing," he said, adding that two doses of Covilo are required at an interval of 28 days.

Covilo, which the WHO says is 79 per cent effective against symptomatic infection, is the fifth Covid-19 vaccine approved for use in Thailand by the FDA.

The other four are AstraZeneca, imported by AstraZeneca (Thailand) Ltd and manufactured domestically by Siam Bioscience Ltd; Sinovac Biotech's CoronaVac imported by the Government Pharmaceutical Organisation; Johnson & Johnson vaccine imported by Janssen-Cilag Ltd; Moderna imported by Zuellig Pharma Ltd.

"All private importers are welcome to submit vaccine registration documents, while the FDA will consider the vaccine based on its quality, efficiency and safety as well as ensuring an appropriate risk management plan is in place after the vaccine is approved," said Paisan.

Covilo is thought to be the vaccine of choice for Chulabhorn Royal Academy, which was granted the power to procure Covid-19 vaccine on Wednesday as per an announcement in the Royal Gazette.

Meanwhile, the FDA chief also addressed controversy over a leaked letter from Accap Asset Co to the Royal Academy, saying that the company had tried and failed to sell millions of Sinopharm doses to the government.

"As for the rumour that a private company had proposed to sell 20 million doses of Sinopharm vaccine, our preliminary investigation revealed that the company, Accap Assets Ltd, has not filed vaccine registration documents with the FDA, which is a prerequisite for any importer of vaccine into the country," said Paisan. "The only company that has filed for registration of Sinopharm vaccine in Thailand is Bio Genetech Ltd."


A new campaign called One-Night for One-Dollar has been proposed by the Tourism Council of Thailand (TCT) to attract international tourists back to Phuket, ahead of the popular resort island’s planned July reopening. Bangkok Jack

 Phuket to offer 'ONE-NIGHT for ONE-DOLLAR incentive

An empty beach in Phuket, Thailand.

A new campaign called One-Night for One-Dollar has been proposed by the Tourism Council of Thailand (TCT) to attract international tourists back to Phuket, ahead of the popular resort island's planned July reopening.

Under the plan, participating operators will offer to foreign tourists room rates at US$1 per night – for rooms that typically sell for between 1,000 baht (US$32) and 3,000 baht per night – with costs to be subsidised by the government, explained TCT president Chamnan Srisawat.

If the proposal is green-lit, tourism players in Thailand will roll out the campaign to international markets.

"TCT also discussed the idea with major wholesalers and online travel agents to prepare for the reopening of Phuket. And they are ready to help," Chamnan said.

He expects that out of a total of 70,000 rooms on the island, nearly one million room nights would be up for sales, generating at least 40 billion baht into hotels and other services throughout July.

TCT's proposal has been submitted to the Tourism Authority of Thailand and the Ministry of Tourism and Sports, and will be escalated to the cabinet for approval within June.

If Phuket's One-night, one-dollar campaign proves successful, private sector players and the government may expand the campaign to other destinations such as Koh Samui, Pattaya and Bangkok.

"However, the current wave of Covid-19 infection could (impact the) final decision. But we have been suffering from the pandemic for 15 months now. Only mass tourism will save us," Chamnan said.

Set to be the first Thai city to reopen to vaccinated foreign tourists in July, Phuket is expected to welcome 500,000 visitors through year-end, much lower than the 6.7 million arrivals in 2020, mainly from the first quarter. – TTGAsia.Com