South-east Asian leaders have
agreed to take steps towards the establishment of an ASEAN travel corridor
arrangement framework to facilitate essential business travel within the
region.
Such an arrangement would
necessitate the development of a common set of safety measures to safeguard
public health in the face of Covid-19, noted the leaders in a joint statement
issued at the 37th ASEAN Summit, which took place on November 12 and was hosted
virtually by Vietnam.
Travellers
will also be required to strictly abide by the prevailing public health
regulations stipulated by the authorities of the receiving countries.
The
ASEAN Coordinating Council, supported by the ASEAN Coordinating Council Working
Group on Public Health Emergencies, has been tasked to coordinate and oversee
the development of an ASEAN travel corridor arrangement framework.
This
plan will build upon existing bilateral travel corridors set up between
individual ASEAN member states, as well as those established with partners
outside the region, said the regional grouping in a statement. For instance,
Singapore has already established green lanes with ten countries, including
ASEAN members Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei and Vietnam.
The
leaders further added that they do not preclude the application of the
framework to other categories of travel in the future.
Indonesian
president Joko Widodo is pushing for the regional travel bubble to come into
effect by early 2021, according to Bloomberg. Earlier in June, Indonesia had
proposed the move, which was backed by Thailand and Malaysia, but other
countries have not signalled their support for the arrangement, said the
report.
Indonesia
is battling the largest coronavirus outbreak in South-east Asia, having
recorded 463,007 infections and 15,148 deaths as of Saturday. This month, the
country entered its first recession since the 1998 Asian financial crisis,
after two successive quarters of economic shrinkage.
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