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Taiwan looks to ease Covid-19 quarantine rules, gradually resume ‘normal life’

  • Premier Su Tseng-chang says government must ‘take into account livelihoods and economic development … and step out to the world’
  • Island has kept reported cases below 20,000 since the pandemic began and has enforced a blanket two-week isolation for arrivals

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People get booster shots at a vaccination site in Taipei. About 30 per cent of Taiwan’s 23.5 million people have now had a booster and that figure is gradually rising. Photo: Bloomberg
Taiwan aims to ease its strict Covid-19 quarantine policy from next month as it needs to gradually resume normal life and reopen to the world, the government said on Monday.
Since the pandemic began two years ago, Taiwan has succeeded in keeping reported cases of Covid-19 below 20,000, having enforced a blanket two-week quarantine for everyone arriving on the island even as large parts of the rest of the world have ditched theirs.

Speaking at a meeting with senior health officials, Premier Su Tseng-chang said that even though there could be further domestic infections the government was “quite confident” in its anti-pandemic measures.

“The government must also take into account livelihoods and economic development, gradually return to normal life, and step out to the world,” his office cited him as saying.

On the precondition that there were sufficient medical supplies and preparations and that the vaccination rate continued to rise, Su said he had asked the Central Epidemic Command Centre to “consider whether reasonable and appropriate adjustments” should be made to the quarantine policy and entry of businesspeople.

Health Minister Chen Shih-chung, who leads the command centre in charge of fighting the pandemic, told reporters they were aiming to cut quarantine to 10 days before the middle of March, confident they can detect any infections within that period with testing.

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