In an effort to curb the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, the Executive Yuan has approved a proposal to ban entry to Taiwan by certain travelers from China.
Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) Vice Chairman Johnnason Liu (劉德勳) said that the ban on travelers from Guangdong Province, Shanxi Province, Inner Mongolia and Beijing would take effect immediately, given the deteriorating situation in those places.
However, Chinese spouses and children of Taiwanese who want to reunite with their family members in Taiwan will be exempt from the restriction, he said.
PHOTO: CHIEN JUNG-FENG, TAIPEI TIMES
The Department of Health (DOH) had suggested that all trips between Taiwan and China, Hong Kong and Macau be suspended.
The DOH made the proposal after seven staff members at Taipei Municipal Hoping Hospital were found to have caught the disease on Tuesday night.
The Executive Yuan convened a meeting of the Council for Economic Planning and Development, MAC and the DOH to discuss the department's proposal.
After the meeting, Liu said that exchanges between Taiwan and China, Hong Kong and Macau are still possible.
Liu said that a decision on whether to suspend all cross-strait trips would be made based on how the epidemic developed.
He announced travel policies on three categories of people from China: tourists, professionals and visitors of relatives.
Taiwan would not impose specific travel restrictions for tourists who hold Hong Kong and Macau visas because information on SARS outbreaks in these areas is relatively transparent and their airports strictly screen passengers, Liu said.
Nevertheless, tourists from areas in China which the World Health Organization (WHO) has listed as SARS-affected areas would have to undergo "strict checks" before they are allowed to enter Taiwan, he said.
The WHO has listed Beijing, Guangdong, Hong Kong, Inner Mongolia and Shanxi as SARS-affected areas in China.
The MAC had already asked professionals from these areas to reconsider their trips to Taiwan.
If they still insist on continuing with their trips to Taiwan, the agencies in Taiwan that had invited them would need to take precautionary measures, Liu said.
Those visiting families and relatives are still permitted to enter Taiwan but their applications will be strictly examined, he said.
The MAC "suggested" all travelers to China voluntarily isolate themselves for seven to 10 days after returning. Their names will be provided to hospitals so that their conditions may be traced, Liu said.
Lee Lung-teng (
Lee said the proposal to totally suspend trips between Taiwan and China had presented a dilemma.
"If cross-strait trips are not suspended, the spread of SARS may further afflict Taiwan's economy and society," he said.
However, Lee said that considering the possible economic impact a complete suspension will have on the economy, the government had chosen to limit rather than completely suspend all cross-strait trips.
The MAC said the number of Taiwanese travelers to Hong Kong and Macau had dropped sharply since the SARS outbreak began.
From April 1 to April 17, about 52,000 Taiwanese people have traveled to Hong Kong and Macau. The number of Taiwanese travelers to these two areas in the same period last year was 180,000.
According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC), 230 SARS cases have been reported as of yesterday afternoon. Probable cases have increased to 41 and suspect cases to 60, the CDC said.
Also See Stories:
SARS epidemic: Taipei City closes down hospital
SARS epidemic: Some Gulf states banning entry to Taiwan travelers
SARS epidemic: SARS patients' household waste to be incinerated
SARS epidemic: TSU legislators propose SARS relief fund
Trade officials want more SARS data
Attendance at Computex may plummet
Web sites outline impact of atypical pneumonia
Taiwanese Olympic badminton men’s doubles gold medalist Wang Chi-lin (王齊麟) and his new partner, Chiu Hsiang-chieh (邱相榤), clinched the men’s doubles title at the Yonex Taipei Open yesterday, becoming the second Taiwanese team to win a title in the tournament. Ranked 19th in the world, the Taiwanese duo defeated Kang Min-hyuk and Ki Dong-ju of South Korea 21-18, 21-15 in a pulsating 43-minute final to clinch their first doubles title after teaming up last year. Wang, the men’s doubles gold medalist at the 2020 and 2024 Olympics, partnered with Chiu in August last year after the retirement of his teammate Lee Yang
FALSE DOCUMENTS? Actor William Liao said he was ‘voluntarily cooperating’ with police after a suspect was accused of helping to produce false medical certificates Police yesterday questioned at least six entertainers amid allegations of evasion of compulsory military service, with Lee Chuan (李銓), a member of boy band Choc7 (超克7), and actor Daniel Chen (陳大天) among those summoned. The New Taipei City District Prosecutors’ Office in January launched an investigation into a group that was allegedly helping men dodge compulsory military service using falsified medical documents. Actor Darren Wang (王大陸) has been accused of being one of the group’s clients. As the investigation expanded, investigators at New Taipei City’s Yonghe Precinct said that other entertainers commissioned the group to obtain false documents. The main suspect, a man surnamed
The government is considering polices to increase rental subsidies for people living in social housing who get married and have children, Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) said yesterday. During an interview with the Plain Law Movement (法律白話文) podcast, Cho said that housing prices cannot be brought down overnight without affecting banks and mortgages. Therefore, the government is focusing on providing more aid for young people by taking 3 to 5 percent of urban renewal projects and zone expropriations and using that land for social housing, he said. Single people living in social housing who get married and become parents could obtain 50 percent more
DEMOGRAPHICS: Robotics is the most promising answer to looming labor woes, the long-term care system and national contingency response, an official said Taiwan is to launch a five-year plan to boost the robotics industry in a bid to address labor shortages stemming from a declining and aging population, the Executive Yuan said yesterday. The government approved the initiative, dubbed the Smart Robotics Industry Promotion Plan, via executive order, senior officials told a post-Cabinet meeting news conference in Taipei. Taiwan’s population decline would strain the economy and the nation’s ability to care for vulnerable and elderly people, said Peter Hong (洪樂文), who heads the National Science and Technology Council’s (NSTC) Department of Engineering and Technologies. Projections show that the proportion of Taiwanese 65 or older would