Thai PM apologises for slip-up that caused Covid-19 panic in Bangkok and Rayong

Thai Premier Prayut Chan-o-cha alleged bad faith regarding the two cases. PHOTO: AFP

BANGKOK - Thai Premier Prayut Chan-o-cha on Tuesday (July 14) apologised for lapses with regard to two cases that sparked panic about renewed community transmission of Covid-19 in the kingdom after more than a month of being in the clear.

The two cases involved a nine-year-old daughter of a Sudanese diplomat and an Egyptian military officer who had a layover in Thailand. Patchy details released on Monday about their movements in Bangkok and Rayong province respectively sent the Thai rumour mill into overdrive and sparked public anger about double standards.

The country is now reviewing all its rules, including those that allow arriving diplomats to isolate themselves at home for 14 days instead of undergoing quarantine in a designated facility.

The Sudanese girl was diagnosed with Covid-19 on the same day the family arrived from Sudan, which has over 10,000 coronavirus cases. The family isolated themselves in a Bangkok condominium after the girl was transferred to a hospital.

"I ask for your trust and I am sorry and apologise to all Thais. This is unprecedented," said Mr Prayut.

Earlier in the day, the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA) released detailed timelines of the two patients' movements, partly to dampen speculation on social media that several well-known malls in downtown Bangkok were possibly tainted.

The Thai army on Monday denied it had anything to do with the Egyptian military officer.

He checked into a hotel in Rayong last week with the delegation after arriving at U-Tapao airport as part of a multi-leg journey that also took him to the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan and China. He was exempted from the mandatory 14-day quarantine that applied to arrivals in Thailand.

On Saturday, he visited a mall in Rayong with his compatriots. His test results came back positive only after he had left Thailand on Saturday.

The CCSA disclosed that the delegation had initially resisted being tested for Covid-19.

Mr Prayut alleged bad faith. "It was a military flight, and they were supposed to abide by the mutual agreement. But they violated it, and ventured out of their residence."

CCSA spokesman Taweesilp Visanuyothin said his unit accepted responsibility for the slip-up. "We apologise to the people in Rayong and Bangkok. This has affected thousands of people and more than 10 schools needed to be closed. We will do better," he said.

Officials are now looking into revoking landing permission for other Egyptian flights given the green light earlier.

In a statement released on Tuesday, the Egypt embassy in Thailand expressed "its most sincere regrets and sympathies to all those who may have been adversely affected" and said it was committed to adhering to Thai rules to prevent the spread if the virus.

Thais who were looking forward to a resumption of commercial life were dismayed.

The incidents may also affect the rollout of other plans, like fast-track processing for special groups of foreigners, as the administration tries to plug loopholes that surfaced with the latest cases.

With foreign tourism largely stilled, tourism-dependent Thailand is trying to spur spending by giving out subsidies for local travel. It has also been working on "travel bubble" arrangements to allow selected groups of visitors from Covid-free countries enter the kingdom.

But public sentiment remains largely wary. The majority of respondents in a survey conducted by the National Institute of Development Administration last week were opposed to an arrangement allowing medical tourists who had tested negative and served a 14-day quarantine period to travel around the country.

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