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Travel bubble between Singapore and Australia will revive international student sector

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A proposed travel bubble between Australia and Singapore will revive the international student industry.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison flagged his ambitions for the travel arrangement in his meeting with his Singaporean counterpart last week but has warned it could be “some time” away.

Defence Minister Peter Dutton hopes a proposed travel bubble between Australia and Singapore will revive the international student industry.

 

/  Lee Hsien Loong and Scott Morrison

 

/  Defence Minister Peter Dutton

 

“The international student numbers have dried up, so to see that start again will be important and there are many Australian jobs that hang off that industry,” Dutton said.

“Importantly, the next step from there as the prime minister pointed out yesterday would be the trialling of this passport, the vaccination passport, so we can have the free arrangement.

“It’s not going to happen tomorrow, but let us work toward it as quickly as we can.

“Singapore is a great partner to work with, they are very reliable, they have a great health system and a great tourism destination, as has Australia for those tourists that want to get out of Singapore and come to a great country like Australia.”

Mr Morrison revealed work to create a passage between the two nations after he met last week with Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

“I welcome the fact that we will now work together to put the infrastructure in place, to put the systems in place to enable us to open up in a similar way that we’ve been able to open up to New Zealand from Australia when we’re both in a position to do so,” Mr Morrison said in a joint address following the sixth Singapore-Australia Leaders’ Meeting.

“There is still some time before we reach that milestone, but there is nothing impeding us, as we’ve discussed today, from getting on with the job of putting systems in place that will enable such a bubble to emerge between Singapore and Australia as it does now occur between Australia and New Zealand.”

Priority will be given to students from Singapore “to be able to return to Australia to complete their studies”, Mr Morrison said.

Mr Morrison was on his way to the UK for the G7 summit. His stop in Singapore was understood to be the first of a foreign leader in the country since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.

He stressed that any travel bubble would be opened only in a “safe and calibrated manner… when both sides are ready.”

Singapore has fully vaccinated 1.9 million of its 5.5 million population, or 33%, while Australia lags at 650,000 people having received both jabs out of a population of 25 million, or just 2.6%.

“Neither of us has identified a benchmark rate on vaccination when it comes to the decision that would be taken around a travel bubble,” Morrison elaborated. “But this is something that I think will continually be informed by the medical evidence as time goes on.”

 

/  Singapore Travel Pass app

 

 

Singapore has already adopted the Travel Pass app developed by the International Air Transport Association and trialled by more than 20 airlines as a standardised way to record and share the results of COVID-19 tests along with vaccination records.

The Australian government has also opened talks with IATA about using the Travel Pass – which Qantas is also trialling – as a  ‘vaccination passport’ to help unlock overseas travel.

The Government is also considering a pilot program that would let fully vaccinated Australians travel overseas from August.

The scheme could allow them to fly to selected countries, including low-risk destinations, and return without facing quarantine provided they show a negative COVID result on arrival.

It’s suggested that the trial could be rolled out alongside the introduction of an ‘amber’ grading for less risky countries, which would sit between the current ‘green’ category which for now applies only to New Zealand, and ‘red’, which today is basically the rest of the world.

Travellers arriving from ‘amber’ countries would face far less stringent quarantine rules.

 

 

 

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