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Jakarta Post

Thermal scanners installed at Indonesian ports after Singapore monkeypox case

In Batam, about 3.3 million people arrived at five international water ports last year, including 1 million Singaporeans and 700,000 people of other nationalities.

Rizal Harahap and Fadli (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta/Pekanbaru/Batam
Thu, May 16, 2019

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Thermal scanners installed at Indonesian ports after Singapore monkeypox case Batam Health Agency Didi Kusumajadi (left) on Monday visited the Batam Free Trade Zone Hospital to inspect the isolation and emergency wards following a rare monkeypox case in neighboring Singapore over the weekend. (JP/Fadli)

T

he monitoring of people arriving by air and sea from Singapore has been heightened in Pekanbaru, Riau, and in Batam, Riau Islands, after the city-state reported its first human case of the rare monkeypox virus.

Singapore reported over the weekend that it had identified a case of monkeypox brought in by a Nigerian man. The man has been hospitalized in an isolation ward to prevent the virus from spreading. Twenty-two other people he had been in contact are also being kept in isolation.

State-owned airport operator PT Angkasa Pura II (AP II), which oversees airports in western Indonesia, said it was cooperating with the port health office (KKP) to heighten monitoring at its 13 international airports.

"One of the ways is by installing thermal scanners at airports. If they identify suspected patients, necessary measures will be taken," AP II vice president for corporate communication Yado Yarismano told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.

One of AP II's international airports is Sultan Syarif Kasim (SSK) II International Airport in Pekanbaru. KKP Pekanbaru installed a thermal scanner at the arrival gate of the airport on Sunday to detect any cases of monkeypox.

KKP Pekanbaru head Syarifuddin Saragih said the thermal scanner had been installed to check the 50 to 100 people that arrived daily on direct flights from Singapore.

"Travelers from Singapore can potentially be infected by the monkeypox and spread it here," he said.

Syarifuddin added that so far no passengers had been found to be carrying the virus.

Although the Health Ministry has given no instructions to tighten monitoring, Syarifuddin said his office would continue scanning passengers from Singapore until the situation was declared safe.

State-owned operator PT Angkasa Pura I (AP I), which oversees airports in central and eastern Indonesia, will also coordinate closely with the KKP and the Health Ministry to prevent the spread of the virus, including by setting up thermal scanners at its international airports, spokesperson Awaluddin said.  

Monkeypox is a rare viral disease that emerged in remote parts of central and west Africa in the 1970s. Symptoms in humans include lesions, fever, muscle aches and chills. Although considered milder than smallpox, the disease can also cause death.

Before Singapore, human cases had been found only in United States in 2003 and the United Kingdom and Israel last year.

Indonesian Health Ministry's Disease Control and Prevention Director General Anung Sugihantono said the virus spread through direct contact with infected blood or other bodily fluids or with infected animals. Human cases are very rare.

“There has been no human cases reported in Indonesia,” he said.  

The Batam city administration also set up thermal scanners on Saturday at five international seaports, namely Batam Centre, Citra Tritunas, Sekupang, Marina and Nongsa Point Marina, which directly connect the city and Singapore. According to the Batam Immigration Office, 3.3 million people arrived at the five ports last year, including 1 million Singaporeans and 700,000 people of other nationalities.

If passengers are found to have the symptoms, KKP officers will refer them to the Batam Free Trade Zone Hospital and Embung Fatimah Public Hospital, which the administration has assigned as the main providers of treatment for suspected monkeypox patients.

Batam Health Agency head Tjeptjep Yudiana said the monitoring of passengers from Singapore would continue until the 22 people in isolation in Singapore were declared free of monkeypox.

"The incubation period is 21 days, which will be at the end of this month, so we will wait until then to decide our next step," Tjeptjep told the Post.

He said that so far, the KKP had not detected any people with monkeypox at the ports. The agency has not issued a travel warning following the report, he added. (ars)

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