No quarantine for international passengers arriving in Delhi
Passengers found to be symptomatic during screening will be immediately isolated and taken to a medical facility. If they test positive, their contacts will also be identified and tested, an official said. If travellers test positive for Covid-19, their samples would be sent for genome sequencing.
International travellers arriving in Delhi from Monday onwards will not need to quarantine for seven days or get mandatorily tested at the airport as the list of “at-risk” countries and mandatory seven days home quarantine have been done away with in the wake of significant improvement in the Covid-19 situation, according to the revised guidelines of international arrivals issued by the ministry of health and family welfare.

The passengers will have to, however, self-monitor their health for the next 14 days of arrival and if travellers under self-health monitoring, develop Covid-19 symptoms, they will immediately self-isolate and report it to their nearest health facility.
The Delhi Disaster Management Authority on Sunday issued an order in compliance with the revised Union ministry of health guidelines. A DDMA official forwarded the guidelines to the health department and all district magistrates.
Passengers found to be symptomatic during screening will be immediately isolated and taken to a medical facility. If they test positive, their contacts will also be identified and tested, an official said. If travellers test positive for Covid-19, their samples would be sent for genome sequencing.
According to the guidelines, a group of 2% of the total passengers in a flight will undergo random post arrival testing at the airport on arrival. Such travellers in each flight will be identified by the airlines concerned (preferably from different countries). Such passengers will submit their samples and will be allowed to leave the airport.
“The need to monitor the continuously changing nature of the virus and evolution of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern thus, must still remain in focus. While monitoring the nature and spread of infection in the country and across the globe, cognizance is also given to the fact that economic activities need to be taken up in an unhindered manner,” the guidelines stated.
DDMA is likely to meet anytime this week to review the existing curbs and discuss with experts whether the curbs should be lifted to allow economic activities to be carried out unhindered.
Currently, Delhi is under multiple curbs – night curfew (11pm to 5 am), no standing passengers allowed in buses, metro, 50% capacity for restaurants, bars, cinemas, only two passengers are allowed in auto rickshaws/cabs, banquet halls are closed except for wedding functions, visitors are not allowed in religious places, among other restrictions. Since the Covid-19 positivity rate on Sunday has dropped to 1.5%, the DDMA may lift some more restrictions.
Traders have started raising demands for lifting of night curfew. Chamber of Trade and Industry chairman Brijesh Goyal and Confederation of All India Traders secretary general Praveen Khandelwal have appealed to the DDMA to lift the remaining curbs as well.
Dr Jugal Kishore, the head of the department of community medicine at Safdarjung Hospital, said the seven days home quarantine mandate was not necessary for international arrivals because the coronavirus situation fuelled by Omicron wave is receding fast. “Random testing of certain number of passengers particularly gene sequencing is a good idea,” said Dr Kishore.
He added that since the Covid-19 positivity rate in Delhi has dropped to 1.5% and continues to decrease across the country, a majority of cases are mild in nature and mortality is only among those with comorbid conditions, the government should lift the remaining curbs as well.
ABOUT THE AUTHORAlok K N MishraAlok K N Mishra is a journalist with the Hindustan Times, New Delhi. He writes on governance, policy and politics. He is an ardent follower of politics and is fascinated about making politics work better for the middle-class and the poor. He loves to discuss and predict the national political behaviour. Before shifting to Delhi, he covered political instability, governance, and misgovernance besides Maoists insurgency in Jharkhand for almost half a decade. He started out in 2010 as a city reporter with Times of India, Patna.Read More
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