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Airport staff jittery serving passengers from affected countries

Some staff of the Ghana Airport Company, Civil Aviation Authority, Customs Excise and Preventive Service and the Immigration Service who work at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) are jittery over news of Nigeria announcing its first Coronavirus (COVID-19) case last Friday.

The staff are not comfortable with the set up at the airport to deal with matters concerning COVID-19 which is spreading from other continents to Africa.

According to a source at the airport, who spoke on condition of anonymity, some staff are shying away from searching passengers from Ethiopian and Emirates Airlines; the two major airlines that transit passengers from China to Ghana. The recent fear heightened when Nigeria became the first African country to record the COVID-19 case.

The source told B&FT that many staff are hesitant to engage any flight from Nigeria. “We know that we are not safe even though we get the assurance from our bosses. We know that some of our bosses don’t even trust what they are telling us and they won’t even want to be in our shoes.

This is what we do for a living and we cannot go home just because of the coronavirus news. We just want to see more changes here at the airport and more health personnel to enhance the assurance. We were lucky with Ebola and we pray we are lucky with this too,” she said.

Loose scrutiny at KIA

Reports were rife last week about porous checks at the airports with some students from China claiming they were loosely scrutinized apart from a form they were asked to complete upon their arrival at KIA.

Port Health Authorities have swiftly debunked the reports saying the questionnaire the students filled were Health Declaration Forms which was a mandatory measure recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO). The authorities stressed that the forms were to aid personnel from the Ministry of Health locate any entrant who starts to manifest symptoms of the novel coronavirus after incubation period.

The authorities at the airport explained that there are thermal scanners installed at the entry points upon arrival which are used to screen travellers in order to monitor their temperatures, and anyone with an unreasonable temperature is sent to the Ridge Hospital for further examination.

Government has also allocated GH¢2.5 million as a start-up fund to fight coronavirus, Health Minister, Kweku Agyeman Manu, revealed to Parliament on Tuesday, 4 February 2020.

The ministry has also designated the Ridge Hospital (Greater Accra Regional Hospital) and Tema General Hospital as initial case management centres in Accra to deal with a case of infection.

In a statement to the media, the ministry has directed all Regional Directors across the country to designate holding or treatment centres in their respective regions. “We are preparing to designate more centres in the highly populated areas of Accra, Kumasi, Takoradi and Tamale,” the statement said.

Also, Case Management Teams have been activated to manage cases at the designated national centres and are currently receiving orientation on the management of possible coronavirus cases, the statement said.

Ethiopian still flying to China but offer assurances

Currently, there is no direct flight from Ghana to China where the disease emanates but many passengers transit through Dubai on Emirates and Ethiopian Airlines into Ghana. Ethiopian Airline, Africa biggest airline has stated that it is not grounding planes to China but has reduced its frequency; a move many have described as having economical and not medical backing.

The Management of Ethiopian Airlines has assured its Ghanaian clients that it has stepped up passenger screening and aircraft disinfection process at the Addis Ababa Bole International Airport in accordance to the World Health Organisation (WHO) standards.

Ghana’s first-quarter passenger throughput expectation will be greatly affected by the phenomenon. Per a Bloomberg report, the outbreak of the coronavirus has prompted dozens of nations and airlines to restrict travel, increasingly isolating the country of more than 1.3 billion people. Nearly 10,000 flights were cancelled between the outbreak of the virus and Jan. 31, according to Cirium, which provides data and research on the travel industry.

African countries that have restricted flights to and from China include Morocco, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Egypt. The World Health Organization has so far said that such limits on trade and travel aren’t needed to control the spread of the virus.

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