Singapore Prime Minister Says He May Open Borders for Year-End Interview with BBC



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SINGAPORE: Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said in a television interview that he expected Singapore to begin reopening its borders by the end of the year as more countries step up vaccination campaigns against Covid-19 infections.

The Southeast Asian island nation has largely banned leisure travel, but has put in place some official and business travel programs. It is also discussing the mutual recognition of vaccine certificates with other nations.

“I hope that if many countries can have substantial proportions of their populations vaccinated by the end of this year, we can be confident and have developed the systems to open our international borders to travel safely again,” Lee said in an interview with the BBC. which aired on Sunday.

“Hopefully by the end of this year or next, the doors can start to open, if not sooner,” he said.

The city-state has controlled its Covid-19 situation with few new local cases and has been implementing its vaccination program, having approved Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.

As of March 8, the country of 5.7 million people had administered just over 611,000 doses of vaccines, a much slower rate compared to larger nations. But he has said he plans to vaccinate everyone by the end of the year.

Lee said few local cases mean the city-state could take the time to persuade its population to get vaccinated. Some are hesitant because of the low risk of infection and concern about the possible side effects of rapidly developed vaccines.

Singapore also received the Sinovac Biotech vaccine from China prior to approval. Lee said Singapore was evaluating the vaccine and will use it if it passes safety and efficacy standards.

The city-state’s small open economy saw its worst recession in 2020 due to the pandemic, after being hit the previous year by trade tensions between the United States and China. Reuters



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