HK suspends Philippine Airlines flights from Manila for 2 weeks
FILE PHOTO
The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) on Monday announced the suspension of Philippine Airlines flight from Manila for two weeks, a day before (September 1) the HK government allows entry of vaccinated Filipino workers to the region using a Bureau of Quarantine vaccination certificate.
The suspension order will last until September 11, following reports that three of the seven imported coronavirus cases confirmed in Hong Kong on Sunday were found to have come from Manila via the airline’s flight PR300.
Mike Cheung Chung-wai, president of the Overseas Employment Centre, said he was surprised to find out about the sudden flight suspension.
“I’m just hearing about this, but we will be affected,” he said. “It’s just going to be a big impact, not only for clients intending to bring in helpers … but also future clients who are open to helpers overseas will now have second thoughts.”
Philippine Airlines is one of a handful of carriers shuttling domestic workers between Manila and Hong Kong, and the unexpected ban comes at a particularly inopportune time.
Some employer unions, however, noted there were still two other options available – Cathay Pacific Airways and Cebu Pacific Air – and were optimistic that affected parties could still change their plans, albeit with some inconvenience.
Betty Yung Ma Shan-yee, chairwoman of the Hong Kong Employers of Domestic Helpers Association, said she was yet to receive any complaints from members regarding the flight ban.
“Employers should still be able to switch airlines,” she added.
But Thomas Chan Tung-fung, chairman of the Hong Kong Union of Employment Agencies, said affected employers might need to buy another ticket first, then wait for months for a refund from Philippine Airlines.
“The impact is not so serious as two other airlines are still operating … but it’s quite embarrassing for employers to (rebook) flights from Philippine Airlines to other airlines; the time frame is quite tight for them,” he said.
Earlier, thousands of would-be helpers in the Philippines and Indonesia with work lined up in the city had found themselves stuck in limbo for months due to Hong Kong authorities’ reluctance to accept Covid-19 vaccination records from their home countries. However, with local employer representatives warning of a serious labour shortage, the government finally struck deals with the two high-risk countries to allow helpers vaccinated there to begin flying into the city on Monday.
Employers had hoped that thousands of foreign domestic helpers would take advantage of the arrangement in the coming months, but the process – already hampered by a limited number of quarantine hotel rooms – is likely to be complicated early on by the Philippine Airlines ban.