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Coronavirus

Singapore relaxes COVID travel curbs, mask rules further

Travelers not fully vaccinated won't need to show test results

Commuters in Singapore in April 2022: The city-state will no longer require travelers who are not fully vaccinated to show COVID-19 test results, starting Feb. 13.   © Reuters

SINGAPORE (Reuters) -- Singapore will drop a requirement for travelers who are not fully vaccinated to show COVID test results or purchase coronavirus travel insurance from Feb. 13, the government's virus task force said on Thursday.

Masks will also not be required to be worn on public transport, the health ministry said in a statement, as authorities lowered the disease outbreak response level to "green" from "yellow," indicating COVID-19 is not threatening.

However, masks will still be mandatory in health care settings, where there is interaction with patients and in indoor patient-facing areas.

"Within Singapore our COVID situation has remained stable over the recent months, despite increased travel over the year-end holidays and China's shift from zero COVID," Lawrence Wong, deputy prime minister and co-chair of the virus task force, told a media briefing.

"Our population has developed a high level of hybrid immunity," he said.

Around 80% of the city-state's 5.6 million population have achieved minimum COVID-19 vaccination protection, and around half are up to date with their additional booster shots, health ministry data showed.

"We've had to deal with many unexpected curveballs and surprises along the way. But we managed to reach this point together because we all did our part," Wong said.

The public can also remove COVID-19 contact-tracing apps, and the government has deleted identifiable data from its servers and database, health minister Ong Ye Kung said.

Since April last year, Singapore had lifted most of its COVID-19 restrictions with many international events returning to the city-state, attracting tourists and businesses.

The Asian financial hub is expecting the tourism sector to recover to pre-pandemic levels by 2024.

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