Beijing may refuse entry to Taiwanese visitors with ‘Wuhan coronavirus’ on their test results, Air China says
- Health certificates that use the phrase ‘will be deemed void’ and may result in passengers being refused entry on arrival, flag carrier says
- Beijing has sought to create distance between the deadly pathogen and the city in which it was first identified at the end of last year
“Regarding passengers who are taking cross-strait flights and need to provide a Covid-19 negative polymerase chain reaction certificate issued within 72 hours, they are reminded to provide the certificates that bear the official term ‘Covid-19’ or ‘novel coronavirus’,” the company said in a notice to Taiwanese travel agents on Wednesday.
“If their certificates carry the words ‘Wuhan coronavirus’ they will be deemed void,” Air China said, adding that any missing or invalid paperwork could result in passengers being refused entry on arrival.
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If a passenger’s test result papers failed to use the correct terminology it “could result in the deprival of the rights of entry”, she said.
Wuhan is the central China city in which the coronavirus was first identified at the end of last year, but Beijing has sought to prevent its name becoming indelibly linked to the pathogen.
Another of China’s airlines, China Southern, published a similar warning to passengers on its Taiwan-based website on Thursday. All customers should use the official name for Covid-19 on their test results, it said.
The term “Wuhan coronavirus” is frequently used in Taiwan, even by government officials and medical institutions that carry out Covid-19 tests.
When Taiwan’s Health Minister Chen Shih-chung was asked earlier in the year why Taiwan kept using the phrase, even after the WHO had started using Covid-19, he replied: “It is where the virus originated, so it makes it easy to remember.”
Taiwan has been widely praised for its handling of the coronavirus. Since the start of the health crisis, the island of about 24 million people has reported just 759 cases and seven deaths. It has not reported a local infection since April.