Minggu, 14 Juni 2020

Hong Kong’s rich are preparing for a worst-case scenario - yahoo.com

Protests in Hong Kong to mark the June 12 anniversary of the first major clashes of last year’s anti-government unrest. (PHOTO: AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

By Alfred Liu, Lulu Yilun Chen and Vinicy Chan

(Bloomberg) -- One Hong Kong businessman moved US$10 million to Singapore and plans to transfer more. Another is eyeing London property, worried that prices in Hong Kong are too high. Well-to-do families across the city are opening offshore bank accounts and applying for alternative passports.

While it doesn’t add up to an exodus just yet, Hong Kong’s rich are increasingly hedging their bets as the financial hub suffers its worst economic and political crises since at least 1997.

Many high-net-worth investors are either reducing their Hong Kong exposure or taking steps to ensure they can withdraw assets at a moment’s notice, underscoring the challenge for Chief Executive Carrie Lam as she tries to maintain the city’s status as magnet for Asian wealth. Rich individuals are major players in Hong Kong’s equity and real-estate markets as well as big buyers of Chinese corporate bonds issued in the city.

Private bankers say their clients accelerated contingency planning efforts after China announced last month it would impose controversial national security laws on Hong Kong. The legislation threatens to erode the former British colony’s judicial independence, provoke sanctions from the U.S. and revive street protests that battered the tourism and retail industries even before the coronavirus outbreak plunged the economy into its deepest recession on record.

“What we’re basically seeing is a bit like a slow-moving train wreck,” said Richard Harris, chief executive of Port Shelter Investment Management in Hong Kong. “People who haven’t moved their money out may be tempted to think: ‘Well, maybe I should be moving my money out.’ That process is likely to continue.”

To be sure, there’s little evidence so far of widespread capital flight.

Hong Kong bank deposits increased to a record in April and the city’s currency has continued to trade at the strong end of its permitted band against the dollar. Hong Kong’s wealthiest billionaires have publicly endorsed the proposed security laws and expressed confidence in the city’s future.

In private, however, many Hong Kong entrepreneurs and high-earning professionals are sounding a more pessimistic note.

Cheng, the businessman who moved US$10 million to Singapore, also secured his permanent resident status in the city-state this year and has been selling his Hong Kong properties. He has no concrete plans to emigrate yet, but is considering his options. He and his family have passports from the U.S., Canada, Australia and France.

Cheng, who was born in Hong Kong, said he worries about China’s tightening grip on the city and the prospect for more unrest. Like several of the people quoted in this story, he asked not to reveal his full name because of the political sensitivity of the subject.

Sam, a senior investment banker in Hong Kong, has decided to leave the city. The 43-year-old is emigrating to Australia with his wife and two young boys in about three months, the second time he will have left Hong Kong during a period of political turmoil. Sam grew up in the city, but moved to Brisbane when he was 12 after his parents got spooked by China’s crackdown on protesters in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989. He came back to Hong Kong 20 years ago for his career but now sees no upside to staying.

“Things are looking bad and deteriorating,” he said. “We may as well pack our bags and move to Australia so that the kids can have a better environment growing up.”

Margaret Chau, a Hong Kong-based immigration program director for Goldmax Immigration Consulting Co., said inquiries at her firm have jumped about five-fold after news of the national security legislation. For now, most of her wealthy customers are more interested setting up an escape route than leaving right away.

“They see this as a backup plan,” Chau said.

Kerry Goh, chief executive officer of multi-family office Kamet Capital in Singapore, said his clients have shifted from asking generic questions about moving out of Hong Kong to making detailed inquiries about everything from schools to visas and bank accounts.

“What’s happened in Hong Kong has really sped up the timing of 2047,” Goh said, referring to the expiration date of China’s 50-year pledge to preserve Hong Kong’s autonomy after the handover from Britain. “As Hong Kong’s troubles shoot up, the benefits of Singapore have become more self-explanatory.”

Other more far-flung locales are also attracting increased interest from investors in Hong Kong. Puerto Rico’s Standard International Bank, a so-called International Financial Entity that expanded its footprint in Asia last year, has seen its deposits more than triple since December 2019, according to general manager Maria Diaz. “Turbulence in Hong Kong has changed the landscape,” she said.

Dennis, a 34-year-old executive at a Hong Kong-based consulting firm founded by his parents, said his family and many of their friends have started moving cash out of the city. He’s looking to buy more properties in the U.K., where he spent almost a decade attending boarding school and university.

“I could buy a much bigger flat in London, so why not?” he said. “I’m just trying to protect my money against any uncertainty.”

© 2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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2020-06-14 05:28:57Z
CBMiZ2h0dHBzOi8vc2cuZmluYW5jZS55YWhvby5jb20vbmV3cy9ob25nLWtvbmdzLXJpY2gtYXJlLXByZXBhcmluZy1mb3ItYS13b3JzdGNhc2Utc2NlbmFyaW8tMDUwNDAyODU1Lmh0bWzSAW9odHRwczovL3NnLmZpbmFuY2UueWFob28uY29tL2FtcGh0bWwvbmV3cy9ob25nLWtvbmdzLXJpY2gtYXJlLXByZXBhcmluZy1mb3ItYS13b3JzdGNhc2Utc2NlbmFyaW8tMDUwNDAyODU1Lmh0bWw

Hong Kong’s rich are preparing for a worst-case scenario - Yahoo Singapore News

Protests in Hong Kong to mark the June 12 anniversary of the first major clashes of last year’s anti-government unrest. (PHOTO: AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

By Alfred Liu, Lulu Yilun Chen and Vinicy Chan

(Bloomberg) -- One Hong Kong businessman moved US$10 million to Singapore and plans to transfer more. Another is eyeing London property, worried that prices in Hong Kong are too high. Well-to-do families across the city are opening offshore bank accounts and applying for alternative passports.

While it doesn’t add up to an exodus just yet, Hong Kong’s rich are increasingly hedging their bets as the financial hub suffers its worst economic and political crises since at least 1997.

Many high-net-worth investors are either reducing their Hong Kong exposure or taking steps to ensure they can withdraw assets at a moment’s notice, underscoring the challenge for Chief Executive Carrie Lam as she tries to maintain the city’s status as magnet for Asian wealth. Rich individuals are major players in Hong Kong’s equity and real-estate markets as well as big buyers of Chinese corporate bonds issued in the city.

Private bankers say their clients accelerated contingency planning efforts after China announced last month it would impose controversial national security laws on Hong Kong. The legislation threatens to erode the former British colony’s judicial independence, provoke sanctions from the U.S. and revive street protests that battered the tourism and retail industries even before the coronavirus outbreak plunged the economy into its deepest recession on record.

“What we’re basically seeing is a bit like a slow-moving train wreck,” said Richard Harris, chief executive of Port Shelter Investment Management in Hong Kong. “People who haven’t moved their money out may be tempted to think: ‘Well, maybe I should be moving my money out.’ That process is likely to continue.”

To be sure, there’s little evidence so far of widespread capital flight.

Hong Kong bank deposits increased to a record in April and the city’s currency has continued to trade at the strong end of its permitted band against the dollar. Hong Kong’s wealthiest billionaires have publicly endorsed the proposed security laws and expressed confidence in the city’s future.

In private, however, many Hong Kong entrepreneurs and high-earning professionals are sounding a more pessimistic note.

Cheng, the businessman who moved US$10 million to Singapore, also secured his permanent resident status in the city-state this year and has been selling his Hong Kong properties. He has no concrete plans to emigrate yet, but is considering his options. He and his family have passports from the U.S., Canada, Australia and France.

Cheng, who was born in Hong Kong, said he worries about China’s tightening grip on the city and the prospect for more unrest. Like several of the people quoted in this story, he asked not to reveal his full name because of the political sensitivity of the subject.

Sam, a senior investment banker in Hong Kong, has decided to leave the city. The 43-year-old is emigrating to Australia with his wife and two young boys in about three months, the second time he will have left Hong Kong during a period of political turmoil. Sam grew up in the city, but moved to Brisbane when he was 12 after his parents got spooked by China’s crackdown on protesters in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989. He came back to Hong Kong 20 years ago for his career but now sees no upside to staying.

“Things are looking bad and deteriorating,” he said. “We may as well pack our bags and move to Australia so that the kids can have a better environment growing up.”

Margaret Chau, a Hong Kong-based immigration program director for Goldmax Immigration Consulting Co., said inquiries at her firm have jumped about five-fold after news of the national security legislation. For now, most of her wealthy customers are more interested setting up an escape route than leaving right away.

“They see this as a backup plan,” Chau said.

Kerry Goh, chief executive officer of multi-family office Kamet Capital in Singapore, said his clients have shifted from asking generic questions about moving out of Hong Kong to making detailed inquiries about everything from schools to visas and bank accounts.

“What’s happened in Hong Kong has really sped up the timing of 2047,” Goh said, referring to the expiration date of China’s 50-year pledge to preserve Hong Kong’s autonomy after the handover from Britain. “As Hong Kong’s troubles shoot up, the benefits of Singapore have become more self-explanatory.”

Other more far-flung locales are also attracting increased interest from investors in Hong Kong. Puerto Rico’s Standard International Bank, a so-called International Financial Entity that expanded its footprint in Asia last year, has seen its deposits more than triple since December 2019, according to general manager Maria Diaz. “Turbulence in Hong Kong has changed the landscape,” she said.

Dennis, a 34-year-old executive at a Hong Kong-based consulting firm founded by his parents, said his family and many of their friends have started moving cash out of the city. He’s looking to buy more properties in the U.K., where he spent almost a decade attending boarding school and university.

“I could buy a much bigger flat in London, so why not?” he said. “I’m just trying to protect my money against any uncertainty.”

© 2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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2020-06-14 05:04:00Z
52780851918539

Sabtu, 13 Juni 2020

China reports 57 new virus cases, highest daily count since April - The Straits Times

BEIJING (AFP) - China reported 57 new cases of the coronavirus on Sunday (June 14), the highest daily figure since April, as concerns grow about a resurgence of the disease.

The domestic outbreak in China had been brought largely under control through strict lockdowns that were imposed early this year – but a new outbreak has been linked to a meat and vegetable market in south Beijing.

The National Health Commission said 36 of the new cases were domestic infections in the capital.

The other two domestic infections reported Sunday were in north-eastern Liaoning province, and local health officials said they were close contacts of the Beijing cases.

The alert was sounded after the NHC confirmed the first cases in Beijing for two months on Friday and city officials delayed the return of students in primary schools that had not already resumed classes. 

Several of the new cases were linked to the Xinfadi wholesale market, and more cases connected with the market emerged Saturday after wider testing. 

The market was closed and AFP reporters saw hundreds of police officers – many wearing masks and gloves – and dozens of paramilitary police deployed there on Saturday.

The new cluster of domestic infections has prompted fresh lockdowns with people ordered to stay home in 11 residential estates near to the market. 

Worries have also grown about the safety of the food supply chain, with some other markets in the city also closed.

State-run media had reported that the virus was detected on chopping boards used to handle imported salmon, and that major supermarket chains had removed stocks of salmon.

Beijing authorities ordered a city-wide food safety inspection focusing on fresh and frozen meat, poultry and fish in supermarkets, warehouses and catering services. 

One trader surnamed Sun, selling tomatoes and cherries at a local food market in central Beijing, told AFP on Sunday that there were fewer customers than normal. 

"People are scared," he said. "The meat sellers have had to close. This disease is really scary."

Although the Xinfadi market accounts for much of the capital’s food supply, Sun said that it didn’t affect him as he gets his produce directly from farmers. 

Others were less concerned. 

"Business is as usual on my stand," a fruit and vegetable seller surnamed Liu told AFP. "I’m not particularly afraid of this new outbreak."

She said it was "reassuring" that the areas around Xinfadi had been locked down. 

And 32-year-old shopper Song Weiming told AFP: "As long as you wear a face mask, it should be fine... Anyway, I have to buy food, right?"  

Nine nearby schools and kindergartens have been closed and Beijing has delayed the return of students to primary schools.

Sporting events, group dining and cross-provincial tour groups have also been stopped.

The rest of the cases reported Sunday were brought into the country by Chinese nationals returning home from overseas.

Related Stories: 

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2020-06-14 03:56:01Z
52780845591481

China reports 57 new COVID-19 cases, lockdowns imposed in parts of Beijing - CNA

BEIJING: Lockdowns were imposed in parts of Beijing on Saturday (Jun 13) to try to prevent the spread of a new coronavirus cluster, with 57 new COVID-19 cases reported.

It is the highest number of new cases reported in China since Apr 13, according to data released by the national health authority on Sunday.

There are fears of a resurgence in local transmissions in China, where the outbreak curve has been months ahead of the rest of the world, and comes as many European nations are further lifting lockdowns.

READ: Widow of Chinese doctor who first warned of COVID-19 gives birth to son: Report

A man buries a relative, who died of coronavirus, in a Los Angeles cemetery -- the US remains the
A man buries a relative, who died of coronavirus, in a Los Angeles cemetery - the US remains the world's hardest-hit country. (Photo: AFP/Orlando Sierra)

After the disease emerged late last year in central China, authorities there largely eliminated transmission within their borders through hyper-strict lockdowns later emulated across the globe.

But on Thursday, Beijing announced its first infection in two months and then said 50 more cases had been linked to the large Xinfadi meat and vegetable market in the city's southwestern Fengtai district.

More cases connected with the market emerged on Saturday after wider testing.

The market was closed and AFP reporters saw hundreds of police officers - many wearing masks and gloves - and dozens of paramilitary police deployed there on Saturday.

The new cluster of domestic infections has prompted fresh lockdowns with people ordered to stay home in 11 residential estates near to the market.

Worries have also grown about the safety of the food supply chain, with some other markets in the city also closed.

Chinese paramilitary police guard entrances to Beijing's now closed Xinfadi market
Chinese paramilitary police guard entrances to Beijing's now closed Xinfadi market. (Photo: AFP/Greg Baker)

"Everyone's very stressed," an elderly driver told AFP outside a fenced-off neighbourhood in southwest Beijing.

"There are cases living in there. It's real."

READ: China's Hubei province to further lower COVID-19 emergency response level

Nineteen of the new confirmed cases were imported cases involving travellers from overseas, with 17 of them arriving in Guangdong.

China also reported nine asymptomatic cases, one new suspected case and no new deaths from COVID-19 for June 13.

The total number of COVID-19 cases in mainland China now stands at 83,132, while the death toll remained unchanged at 4,634. China does not count asymptomatic patients, who are infected with the virus but do not display symptoms, as confirmed cases.

READ: China offering coronavirus candidate vaccines to state workers: Report

MORE THAN 427,000 DEAD

Worldwide, the pandemic has killed more than 427,000 and infected more than 7.7 million, while wreaking widespread economic devastation.

The number of global infections has doubled in slightly over a month - with one million cases recorded in the last nine days - and the virus is spreading most rapidly in Latin America.

Mexico and Chile on Friday recorded their worst days yet during the pandemic, while Chilean health minister Jaime Manalich resigned on Saturday amid a furore over the true disease toll there.

Brazil has recorded 41,828 deaths, surpassing Britain's toll.

The WHO said this week the pandemic is accelerating in Africa. Botswana's capital Gaborone was locked down Saturday after new cases were detected.

In the US, which has seen the most COVID-19 deaths with over 115,000, more than a dozen states - including populous Texas and Florida - reported their highest-ever daily case totals in recent days.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-06-14 02:15:00Z
52780845591481

Fresh China cluster raises fears for COVID-19 control - CNA

BEIJING: Lockdowns were imposed in parts of Beijing on Saturday (Jun 13) to try to prevent the spread of a new coronavirus cluster, highlighting the challenges that lie ahead even for places where outbreaks are under control.

There are fears of a resurgence in local transmissions in China, where the outbreak curve has been months ahead of the rest of the world, and comes as many European nations are further lifting lockdowns.

The pandemic is still surging elsewhere, particularly in Latin America, with Brazil claiming the unenviable position of having the world's second-highest death toll, behind the United States.

A man buries a relative, who died of coronavirus, in a Los Angeles cemetery -- the US remains the
A man buries a relative, who died of coronavirus, in a Los Angeles cemetery - the US remains the world's hardest-hit country. (Photo: AFP/Orlando Sierra)

After the disease emerged late last year in central China, authorities there largely eliminated transmission within their borders through hyper-strict lockdowns later emulated across the globe.

But on Thursday, Beijing announced its first infection in two months and then said 50 more cases had been linked to the large Xinfadi meat and vegetable market, which provides much of the capital's food supply.

Chinese paramilitary police guard entrances to Beijing's now closed Xinfadi market
Chinese paramilitary police guard entrances to Beijing's now closed Xinfadi market. (Photo: AFP/Greg Baker)

Authorities have forced residents in 11 nearby residential estates to stay home, ordered mass testing, established a "wartime mechanism" and deployed hundreds of police officers.

"Everyone's very stressed," an elderly driver told AFP outside a fenced-off neighbourhood in southwest Beijing.

"There are cases living in there. It's real."

MORE THAN 427,000 DEAD

Worldwide, the pandemic has killed more than 427,000 and infected more than 7.7 million, while wreaking widespread economic devastation.

The number of global infections has doubled in slightly over a month - with one million cases recorded in the last nine days - and the virus is spreading most rapidly in Latin America.

Mexico and Chile on Friday recorded their worst days yet during the pandemic, while Chilean health minister Jaime Manalich resigned on Saturday amid a furore over the true disease toll there.

Brazil has recorded 41,828 deaths, surpassing Britain's toll.

Brazil claimed the unenviable position of having the second-highest virus death toll worldwide
Brazil claimed the unenviable position of having the second-highest virus death toll worldwide. (Photo: AFP/Nelson Almeida)

The WHO said this week the pandemic is accelerating in Africa. Botswana's capital Gaborone was locked down Saturday after new cases were detected.

In the US, which has seen the most COVID-19 deaths with over 115,000, more than a dozen states - including populous Texas and Florida - reported their highest-ever daily case totals in recent days.

In Russia, with the world's third-highest number of cases, authorities more than doubled the official death toll for April after changing how the country classifies fatalities.

There is still no treatment for COVID-19, but pharmaceutical group AstraZeneca said it has agreed to supply an alliance of European countries with up to 400 million doses of a possible vaccine.

German government sources told AFP a vaccine could be developed by year-end.

'READY TO WELCOME TOURISTS'

A number of European countries are preparing to reopen borders on Monday after the EU Commission urged a relaxation of restrictions.

Poland reopened its borders to fellow EU members on Saturday.

France said it would gradually reopen its borders to non-Schengen countries from July, and Germany said it would end land border checks on Monday.

Europe is pushing ahead with its exit from lockdown
Europe is pushing ahead with its exit from lockdown. (Photo: AFP/Gent Shkullaku)

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis travelled to picturesque Santorini island on Saturday to open his country's tourism season.

"Greece is ready to welcome tourists this summer by putting safety and health as our No 1 priority," he said in English.

Venice sprang back to life Saturday, as hundreds of tourists flocked to the city for the reopening of the iconic Doge's Palace.

"It's a very strong emotion, like the first day of school," said Maria Cristina Gribaudi, who heads the city's Civic Museums Foundation.

In several European countries, the focus has shifted to the courts and who might eventually be blamed for the pandemic.

In hard-hit Italy, prosecutors grilled Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte over his government's response.

"I explained everything to prosecutors," Conte said Saturday, adding he did not fear a possible judicial probe.

Anger is mounting in France, where some 60 complaints have been filed against members of the government.

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II meanwhile celebrated her official birthday on Saturday, with the normal pageantry of the traditional ceremony vastly reduced.

The 94-year-old monarch watched a scaled-down version of the "Trooping the Colour" on the grounds of Windsor Castle, where she has been staying during the virus outbreak.

And live sport returned to New Zealand on Saturday, as 20,000 fans watched rugby's Otago Highlanders edge the Waikato Chiefs, 28-27. The country has gone 22 days without new coronavirus cases.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-06-13 22:04:50Z
52780845591481

AstraZeneca agrees to supply Europe with 400 mln doses of COVID-19 vaccine - Yahoo Singapore News

FILE PHOTO: Small bottles labeled with a "Vaccine COVID-19" sticker and a medical syringe are seen in this illustration

ROME (Reuters) - AstraZeneca Plc said on Saturday it signed a contract with European governments to supply the region with its potential vaccine against the coronavirus, the British drugmaker's latest deal to pledge its drug to help combat the pandemic.

The contract is for up to 400 million doses of the vaccine, developed by the University of Oxford, the company said, adding that it was looking to expand manufacturing of the vaccine, which it said it would provide for no profit during the pandemic.

Deliveries will start by the end of 2020.

The deal is the first contract signed by Europe's Inclusive Vaccines Alliance (IVA), a group formed by France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands to secure vaccine doses for all member states as soon as possible.

At a meeting of EU Health Ministers on Friday, IVA agreed to merge its activities with those of the EU Commission, Germany's Health Ministry said.

"With our European supply chain due to begin production soon, we hope to make the vaccine available widely and rapidly," AstraZeneca Chief Executive Pascal Soriot said in a statement.

The deal is the latest by AstraZeneca to pledge supply of its vaccine to governments who have scrambled to agree advance purchases of promising coronavirus vaccines.

It has agreed manufacturing deals globally to meet its target of producing 2 billion doses of the vaccine, including with two ventures backed by Bill Gates and a $1.2 billion agreement with the U.S. government.

The deal will add a further 100 million doses to the 2 billion already committed by the group, an AstroZeneca spokesman said.

The experimentation phase of the vaccine is already advanced and is expected to end in the autumn, Italian Health Minister Roberto Speranza said in a Facebook post.

There are no approved vaccines or treatments for COVID-19, the highly contagious respiratory illness caused by the novel coronavirus.

"Many countries in the world have already secured vaccines, Europe has not yet. The rapid coordinated action of a group of member states will create added value for all EU citizens in this crisis," Spahn said.

(Reporting by Giuseppe Fonte in ROME and Rama Venkat in BANGALORE; additional reporting by Madeline Chambers in BERLIN, Anthony Deutsch in AMSTERDAM and Ludwig Burger; writing by Giulia Segreti; editing by Louise Heavens and David Holmes)

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2020-06-13 13:09:00Z
52780851213932

Malaysia senior minister lodges police report over fake news that he does not welcome Singaporeans - CNA

PUTRAJAYA: Malaysian Senior Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob has lodged a police report over rumours saying that he did not welcome Singaporeans into the country. 

Ismail Sabri, who is also defence minister, described the fake news as an action with ill-intent, which could cloud relations between both countries. 

READ: Safeguards needed before travel between Singapore and Malaysia can resume: Lawrence Wong 

“I have lodged reports with the police and the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) to investigate (the issue) further,” he said in a news conference on Saturday (Jun 13). 

He added that Malaysia’s borders were still closed to all foreigners, including those from Singapore.

“The fake news apparently said I issued a statement that there is no need for Singaporeans to come to Malaysia if they merely wanted to fill petrol, wash cars, have dinners, and so on.”

The rumour was disseminated in audio and visual format with a voice dub, Ismail Sabri said.

READ: ‘I eat one meal a day’ - Some Malaysians who lost their jobs in Singapore left stranded and cash-strapped

“I know Malaysians may recognise my voice, but Singaporeans who are not watching the daily media conference may not realise it is fake,” he added.

Earlier this week, Ismail Sabri said the special ministerial meeting on the implementation of movement control order (MCO) had agreed to allow Malaysians to travel to and fro for work between Johor Bahru and Singapore

“We are ready to ensure that they take COVID-19 tests ... If that is the condition required by the Singaporean government, that they take swab tests, we agree,” he said. 

The senior minister said that with industries in Singapore operating again, they have requested for their Malaysian employees, who are in Johor Bahru, to commute to Singapore for work.

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2020-06-13 10:29:32Z
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