Foreign nationals who entered Taiwan as visitors before late March 2020 and stayed because of the COVID-19 pandemic will not receive another visa extension, and must leave Taiwan before the end of next month, the National Immigration Agency said yesterday.
Those who entered Taiwan as visitors on or before March 21, 2020, and are still in the nation without having overstayed their visa would not receive another automatic extension, the agency said in a statement.
As COVID-19 border control measures and quarantine rules have been eased, those who received a 30-day extension on Oct. 5 would be required to leave before Nov. 30, it said.
Photo: CNA
Over the past two years, 30-day automatic visa extensions have been granted to foreign visitors, allowing about 420,000 people to stay in Taiwan safely with family or for work during the pandemic, and reducing infection risk from international travel, it said.
Foreign nationals with a visitor visa valid until Dec. 1 or after should leave before the expiration date, it said, adding that foreign nationals who meet conditions such as illness, pregnancy, life-threatening risk, disaster or other unavoidable conditions could apply for special extensions.
Separately, the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) reported 39,138 new COVID-19 infections and 42 COVID-19-related deaths.
Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Deputy Director-General Chuang Jen-hsiang (莊人祥), the CECC’s spokesman, said the local caseload was down 12.7 percent from Tuesday last week, and new cases in all cities and counties, except for Kinmen County, have dropped, suggesting that the local outbreak is slowing down.
CDC Deputy Director-General Philip Lo (羅一鈞), deputy head of the CECC’s medical response division, said a severe case was confirmed in a nine-year-old who did not have any underlying health issues.
The boy developed a cough and sore throat on Oct. 13, tested negative at a clinic, and developed breathing difficulty on Oct. 15, Lo said, adding that the boy was rushed to an emergency room, where he tested positive.
The boy was diagnosed with an asthma attack and put on a ventilator, Lo said, adding that the boy recovered after treatment with several medications and was discharged from hospital on Thursday last week.
Despite the CECC on Monday announcing that from Nov. 7, body temperature measurement would no longer be required at businesses and public facilities, Lo said the eased measure would not be adopted at healthcare facilities and long-term care facilities, as residents are more vulnerable to severe illness.
Current COVID-19 testing requirements for visitors and people accompanying hospitalized patients would also stay in place, he said.
A Ministry of Foreign Affairs official yesterday said that a delegation that visited China for an APEC meeting did not receive any kind of treatment that downgraded Taiwan’s sovereignty. Department of International Organizations Director-General Jonathan Sun (孫儉元) said that he and a group of ministry officials visited Shenzhen, China, to attend the APEC Informal Senior Officials’ Meeting last month. The trip went “smoothly and safely” for all Taiwanese delegates, as the Chinese side arranged the trip in accordance with long-standing practices, Sun said at the ministry’s weekly briefing. The Taiwanese group did not encounter any political suppression, he said. Sun made the remarks when
The Taiwanese passport ranked 33rd in a global listing of passports by convenience this month, rising three places from last month’s ranking, but matching its position in January last year. The Henley Passport Index, an international ranking of passports by the number of designations its holder can travel to without a visa, showed that the Taiwan passport enables holders to travel to 139 countries and territories without a visa. Singapore’s passport was ranked the most powerful with visa-free access to 192 destinations out of 227, according to the index published on Tuesday by UK-based migration investment consultancy firm Henley and Partners. Japan’s and
BROAD AGREEMENT: The two are nearing a trade deal to reduce Taiwan’s tariff to 15% and a commitment for TSMC to build five more fabs, a ‘New York Times’ report said Taiwan and the US have reached a broad consensus on a trade deal, the Executive Yuan’s Office of Trade Negotiations said yesterday, after a report said that Washington is set to reduce Taiwan’s tariff rate to 15 percent. The New York Times on Monday reported that the two nations are nearing a trade deal to reduce Taiwan’s tariff rate to 15 percent and commit Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) to building at least five more facilities in the US. “The agreement, which has been under negotiation for months, is being legally scrubbed and could be announced this month,” the paper said,
Japan and the Philippines yesterday signed a defense pact that would allow the tax-free provision of ammunition, fuel, food and other necessities when their forces stage joint training to boost deterrence against China’s growing aggression in the region and to bolster their preparation for natural disasters. Japan has faced increasing political, trade and security tensions with China, which was angered by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s remark that a Chinese attack on Taiwan would be a survival-threatening situation for Japan, triggering a military response. Japan and the Philippines have also had separate territorial conflicts with Beijing in the East and South China