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Taiwan extends ban on Indonesian workers citing Covid-19 surge

TAIPEI — Taiwan's government on Wednesday (Dec 16) extended a ban on Indonesian workers coming to the island for an indefinite period citing a surge in the number of infected people arriving and lack of cooperation from Indonesia's government in verifying documents.

Passengers stand in line to have documents checked at a Soekarno Hatta Airport amid the Covid-19 outbreak in Jakarta, Indonesia.

Passengers stand in line to have documents checked at a Soekarno Hatta Airport amid the Covid-19 outbreak in Jakarta, Indonesia.

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TAIPEI — Taiwan's government on Wednesday (Dec 16) extended a ban on Indonesian workers coming to the island for an indefinite period citing a surge in the number of infected people arriving and lack of cooperation from Indonesia's government in verifying documents.

Taiwan is home to more than 250,000 migrant workers from Indonesia, which has the highest tally of virus infections and deaths in Southeast Asia. They mostly work as domestic helpers.

Taiwan last month announced a two-week suspension for the entry of Indonesian workers, which the government will now extend, the Central Epidemic Command Centre said.

It did not give a date for when it will re-open entry for the workers, only that the government will make the decision depending on the pandemic situation in Indonesia.

Since the start of October, Taiwan has recorded 132 positive cases in arriving Indonesian workers, of whom 76 carried negative test results with them when they landed, the centre added.

Taiwan's health minister Chen Shih-chung told reporters that represented an unacceptable risk to the island, and that Indonesia's government was being uncooperative.

"To date the Indonesian authorities have been unwilling to cooperate in verifying the documentation," Dr Chen said, referring to the pre-arrival coronavirus tests which are now required for almost everyone arriving in Taiwan.

Some of the Indonesians who have tested positive in Taiwan did so at the end of their mandatory 14-day quarantines, and not all have had symptoms.

Mr Benny Rhamdani, the head of the Agency for the Protection of Indonesian Migrant Workers, told Reuters they had had two meetings with their Taiwanese counterparts this month and suggested the problem may lay with Taiwan.

"It could be, it is our suspicion, that those deemed as positive got infected when the Taiwanese government gathered them, quarantined them," he said.

Indonesia may simply decide going forward to send its workers to other countries, Mr Rhamdani added.

Taiwan itself has kept the pandemic well under control thanks to early and effective prevention, with 130 cases currently in hospital — all of which are imported cases. REUTERS  

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Covid-19 coronavirus Taiwan Indonesia foreign domestic workers

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