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OFW reports hassle-free quarantine process at HK airport

Posted on 21 March 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Gina with her wristband that is yet to be activated

One of the first Filipinos to fly into Hong Kong on the day mandatory quarantine for all incoming passengers took effect says it was smooth sailing at the airport throughout.

But there is just one hiccup: her wrist monitor which is supposed to track her movements while on home quarantine has yet to work, more than 24 hours since she landed at Chek Lap Kok airport. Hers is not an isolated case, however, as authorities confirmed earlier today that a third of the 6,000 wristbands that had been issued were still not working.

Gina O., who flew with her employer aboard Cathay Pacific’s CX 918 flight which arrived in Hong Kong at about 8:30pm on Mar 19, says it took them only a few minutes to clear the airport.

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On landing, they went through the regular thermal scanners which checked their body temperature. “Relaxed naman silang lahat,” she recalled. “Nagkukuwentuhan pa nga.”

But the seamless process started while they will still aboard the plane, she said. Each passenger was handed three pieces of document: a compulsory quarantine form, a home quarantine booklet, and an instruction manual for the Stay Home Safe mobile application.
 
Screen capture of Gina's quarantine declaration form, which warns of the penalty for violators
In the quarantine form, passengers are asked to write down their names, identity document number, their home address or the place they nominate as their intended quarantine address, and contact number.

“May pagpipilian ka. Kung gusto mong sa bahay, sa hotel, o iba pang address kung saan gusto mong mag quarantine,” Gina said. “Basta lagi lang nilang sinasabi, yung address kung saan ka tutuloy habang naka-quarantine.”

The home quarantine booklet, on the other hand, lists down what the confinee must observe, including staying “in a single, well-ventilated room if possible” and to stay at least one meter away from another person inside the house.

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The guidelines also include tips on good personal and environmental hygiene, like not sharing personal items like towels with other people, and using serving chopsticks or spoons when eating together.

But the key to monitoring a quarantined person is the wristband that each must wear for the duration of the enforced isolation. This tracking device is hooked up to a mobile app, which wearers must activate upon reaching home.

The instruction booklet for the app says Government can monitor the wearer’s movements through the environmental electronic signals in the neighborhood. If a change in signals is detected, an alert is sent out, and monitors will ask the confinee to scan the QR code on their wristband to confirm their presence.

Do's and dont's while on quarantine are included in the booklet given to passengers

The declaration form carries the warning that violators of the mandatory quarantine will be fined $25,000 and imprisoned for six months.

The form also carries a date stamp which indicates up to when the home confinement should last. After that date, the wearer can simply cut and dispose of the wristband.  

In Gina’s form, the date stamped was Apr 2, which means she would have to stay indoors only for 12 days, two days short of the usual quarantine period.

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Told jokingly that she could still go out because her wristband had not yet been activated, Gina said she would not dare risk it. “Wala po akong pambayad ng $25,000. Ayaw ko ring makulong ng six months.”
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Newly-arrived Filipina domestic worker tests positive for Covid-19

Posted on 20 March 2020 No comments
By The SUN

The infected Filipina tested positive 9 days after flying into HK from the Philippines

A Filipina domestic worker who arrived from the Philippines on Mar 11 is among the record 48 new cases of Covid-19 reported in Hong Kong today, Mar 20.

It’s the highest single-day increase in the number of confirmed cases in Hong Kong, with most, or 36 of them, involving people who had traveled to other countries during the incubation period.

The Filipina is included in the new imported cases in the city, as she developed symptoms within 14 days of her arrival.

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The domestic worker reportedly transited through Taipei on her way to Hong Kong, and went straight to her employer’s house. The next day, she went out with her employer, still without symptoms.

But on Mar 13, she developed a fever. It’s unclear why it took another week for her case to be confirmed.

Her employer’s family has been put under quarantine after she was found with Covid-19.
Her case was confirmed by Consul General Raly Tejada earlier tonight, who said the Hong Kong Health Department had just informed the Consulate about the case.

“The Consulate General immediately spoke to her and ascertained that except for a mild cold, she remains healthy and in good spirits,” he said in a statement.

Currently, there are two Filipinas, both domestic workers, who are being treated for Covid-19 infection in Hong Kong.

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Four others had been discharged earlier, after testing positive for the disease, but did not develop serious symptoms.

At least seven are under quarantine for being close contacts of infected patients.

All previous cases involved Filipinos who contracted the disease while working in their employers’ homes.

CE Carrie Lam tours HK Airport as mandatory quarantine for all new arrivals took effect Mar 19

Meanwhile, medical experts are warning of a second wave of contagion in Hong Kong as more residents return home from studies or travel abroad, and most new cases appear to have been brought in by those who just arrived in the city.

The unprecedented 48 new cases involved 25 men and 23 women, and included a four-year-old child, the youngest confirmed patient in the city so far.

They brought the total tally in Hong Kong to 257.

According to Dr Chuang Tsuk-Kwan of the Center for Health Protection, 36 of the new patients had visited the United States, Canada, and several countries in Europe as well as Asia, including Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines.

The others are mainly close contacts.

Of the new cases, four attended a wedding dinner with another infected patient in Discovery Bay, one visited bars in Soho, and another went to the Pure Fitness gym in Central.

The 4-year-old girl is the daughter of a patient confirmed earlier. She was quarantined before testing positive on Mar 12, although she has not developed any symptoms.

Also among the new cases is a taxi driver who has no travel history but picked up passengers from the airport daily. Although he always wore a mask, some of his passengers did not. He lives in Sham Shui Po.

Another notable case is a 69-year-old woman who went to Canada as part of a local tour group of about six people. Her sister who was with her in the tour, has tested positive in a preliminary test after developing diarrhea.

Also included is a 27-year-old karate athlete who went to Austria and France for training with a team member who had earlier tested positive for the coronavirus disease. Four of their team members who flew with them from Thailand to Hong Kong have tested negative.

The new group of infections also includes eight students who had flown in from their studies in the U.K., Canada and the U.S.

The CHP said about 30 people had received positive preliminary results for the virus by noon of Mar 20 alone, the highest daily figure so far.
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Rogue agency owner, staff accused of scamming 8 Filipinas out of $180k

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

The agency owner and her staff offered high-paying jobs to relatives of 8 OFWs

A convicted rogue employment agency owner and her Filipina staff have collected $180,000 from eight Filipino domestic helpers in an employment scam that offered high-paying blue-collar jobs in Hong Kong and Macau, Hong Kong Customs said.

Suzette Ip, head of Unfair Trade Practice Investigation, said the 54-year-old agency owner and her 42-year-old staff duped the eight victims with offers of high pay, regular hours and overtime work, free meals and accommodation to their relatives and friends.

“The victims were also told that their relatives and friends could apply for permanent residency in Hong Kong and Macau after securing the employment,” she said in a media briefing on Mar 17. She did not name the suspects.

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In an emailed response to The SUN, Customs declined to confirm that former agency owner Lennis Ebrahim and her staff Mary Jane Biscocho were the ones referred to in the press briefing as the alleged culprits in the scam.

The SUN had reported the arrest by customs operatives of Ebrahim and Biscocho on Nov 7 last year, after an investigation of the complaints filed by several alleged victims detailing nearly the same circumstances.

The complainants in the earlier report also said the two accused operated from two different offices – one in Kwun Tong, and another in To Kwa Wan, which were the same addresses given by customs operatives.
Ip said the two offered jobs including waiter, gardener, builder and factory worker with monthly salaries between $7,000 and $13,000. Each applicant was charged an agency fee of at least $12,000.

The biggest loss in a single case was $24,000, which was paid by one of the complainants for a job as cleaner in Macau for her boyfriend.

Customs officers launched “Operation Phantom” that began investigating the scam after receiving a complaint in the summer of 2019 against the employment agency, Ip said.
“The victims were also told that their relatives and friends could apply for permanent residency in Hong Kong and Macau after securing the employment,” she said.

Ip said the officers earlier received information that staff of two employment agencies, one in Kwun Tong and another in To Kwa Wan, were allegedly making false claims in selling employment agency services to foreign helpers.

In their complaint to the EAA which they shared with The SUN last year, two alleged victims named the agency as WHT Consultant Company, which had a license to operate as an employment agency at the time. Ebrahim was its licensee.

WHT allegedly promised the complainants that it could arrange for the helpers’ relatives and friends to come and work in Hong Kong. But after collecting money from them, WHT reportedly failed to offer any jobs to their relatives in the Philippines.

The complainants said Ebrahim and her staff first operated from an industrial building in Kwun Tong. But when they started demanding a refund of their money, the two moved to a textile warehouse in To Kwa Wan, and blocked the claimants from contacting them on the phone and social media.

The two said they called the police and brought them to the WHT office in To Kwa Wan. But they found the office locked, and no one answered the door when they rang the bell.

As soon as they left, however, the complainants said Biscocho and another Filipina staff, Nympha Lumatac, sent them SMS messages taunting them for bringing police escorts.

On Nov 15 last year, two charges of applying a false trade description to a service offered to consumers were brought against Biscocho in Kwun Tong Court. She was refused bail.

She and Ebrahim were due to appear again on Jan 31 in the same court, but that did not push through in the wake of court suspensions amid the coronavirus epidemic.

Ebrahim used to own Vicks Maid Consultant Co., which was convicted and its license revoked by EAA for overcharging a jobseeker in July 2015.

Ip said that Customs will continue to step up enforcement to combat unfair trade practices by employment agencies and reminded traders that they must comply with the TDO requirements of the Trade Description Ordinance.

Under the TDO, any trader who applies a false trade description to a service supplied to a consumer commits an offense punishable by a $500,000 fine and five years jail term.

The public may report any suspected violations of the TDO to Customs’ 24-hour hotline 2545 6182 or its dedicated crime-reporting email account (crimereport@customs.gov.hk).
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HK starts mandatory quarantine for incoming travellers

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

All arriving passengers in HK will be tested for Covid-19, and put under mandatory quarantine

All incoming travelers who want to be tested for free for Covid-19 infection can do so as soon as they arrive in Hong Kong.  But the service is open only to those who are aged 65 and above, or anyone who live with people in this age bracket.

The Centre for Health Protection made the announcement as Hong Kong began imposing a 14-day quarantine for all new arrivals from today, Mar 19. Only those arriving from Macau and Taiwan are exempted.

According to CHP, those who qualify for the free tests will be provided specimen containers at the Hong Kong International Airport. They are instructed to use these for their deep throat saliva sample which they must collect in the morning, then submit the containers to CHP on specified collection dates.


Tests on about 5,000 arriving passengers will be administered by the CHP each week.

From tomorrow, Mar. 20, those who exhibit upper respiratory symptoms will be taken to two new testing centers at the Asia World-Expo or the North Lantau Hospital, where they will  have to stay for about half a day, until laboratory results are known.

Both test centers have designated waiting areas for the travelers, who will also have free internet access and charging facilities.

The two measures are being taken in a bid to determine early Covid-19 cases.


Each arriving passenger will be given an electronic wristband which they are required to wear during the quarantine. They are monitored through a phone app linked to the electronic device.

The wrist monitor which each quarantined person must wear for 14 days (DWC photo)
Everyone on quarantine is told not to go out of their homes, or face sanctions. Violators face a maximum fine of $25,000 and/or imprisonment of up to six months.

As of this writing, the number of patients in Hong Kong who tested positive for the virus reached 208 as the CHP reported 16 new cases on Thursday.

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One was a pregnant 32-year-old woman who had a fever and a runny nose after returning from Italy and Dubai.

A second dog was also confirmed to have the virus.
 
But the CHP’s focus is now on the bars, restaurants and gyms in Lan Kwai Fong, after at least five of the patients confirmed in the last two days had links to the nightlife hub in Central.

“We are looking at whether there is a spread among bars and restaurants in Lan Kwai Fong,” Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan, head of the CHP communicable disease branch, said during her daily press conference.

She said three of the new cases had connections with the nightspot while two patients confirmed a day earlier also visited the bars there.
 
Five of the new cases are linked to Lan Kwai Fong (RTHK photo)
The CHP head said two new cases, both 29-year-old men, had been to the Pure Fitness gym in Central. They had been to Singapore or Japan, but before the incubation period.

Another newly confirmed patient had been to Lan Kwai Fong to drink with his friends before he tested positive, Chuang said.

The new cases were announced after CHP confirmed 25 more infected people on Mar 18, the biggest number recorded in a single day.

Meanwhile, at least eight hotels have offered a total of 1,000 rooms for use as quarantine facilities, as health officials expressed fear Hong Kong could run out of places in the coming weeks.

Globally, the total number of confirmed Covid-19 cases has reached 217,845 as of this writing. The deaths totaled 9,177, while the number of recovered patients was 84,234.

China cases reached 80,928 but deaths remained at 3,245. In Italy, the new epicenter of the contagion, the number of cases jumped to 35,713, and the deaths surged to 2,978.


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