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Singapore drops pre-departure requirements for travelers, further eases mask rules

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Singapore drops pre-departure requirements for travelers, further eases mask rules

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People gather outside the ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore on January 17, 2023. (Photo by Roslan RAHMAN / AFP) (Photo by ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Roslan Rahman | Afp | Getty Images

SINGAPORE — Singapore is set to allow non-fully vaccinated travelers to enter the country without a negative pre-departure test from next week, health authorities announced Thursday.

The country is set to remove mask-wearing on public transport from Monday, as it seeks to exit the “acute phase” of the pandemic, said the Ministry of Health.

The country’s Covid task force, created in January 2020, will be deactivated.

“Our Covid situation has remained stable over the recent months, despite increased travel over the year and holidays and China’s shift from zero Covid,” said Singapore’s deputy prime minister Lawrence Wong, who is also co-chair of the Covid task force.

“Our population has developed a high level of hybrid immunity. The risk of infections leading to severe illness or deaths is very low — comparable to other endemic respiratory diseases like influenza.”

The further relaxation of pre-departure travel and mask requirements are “significant steps” that mark Covid-19 as an endemic and “new norm” for Singapore.

Changes to travel

Mask-wearing rules ease

Mask-wearing on public transport and indoor health settings will no longer be mandatory, but Wong encouraged the public to continue wearing masks if they showed any symptoms.

However, mask-wearing is still required be in places like hospital wards, clinics and nursing homes, where there is “interaction with patients” and “indoor patient-facing areas,” the health ministry said.

“This is to better protect patients and healthcare workers from infectious diseases in general,” it added.

The Ministry of Health said that private enterprises may also choose to maintain mask-wearing requirements as company policy for workplace health and safety, or “business continuity reasons.”

Back to pre-pandemic levels

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