MHMS FIJI
MHMS FIJI

Press Release

Statement by Permanent Secretary for Health Dr James Fong
Bula Vinaka everyone.
I hope everyone has a mask or has made a capable substitute. Importantly –– I hope you are wearing it every time you leave your house. In a taxi, on a bus, in the supermarket –– if you are not at home, wear a mask.
I want to thank all those who have adopted this life-saving habit. Please help us encourage everyone to follow your example, not only to wear a mask but to do it properly, with your mouth and nose both fully covered.
I came into the room with a mask on today. Now that I’m properly distanced from everyone, I have removed the mask so that I can be understood clearly by the public. We’ve asked everyone in the room to have careFIJI downloaded on their phones and make sure it is switched on. Once I’m done speaking, my mask will be going right back on so that I protect myself, my loved ones, and my country.
This virus can travel through the air and through tiny droplets that pass from person-to-person within a close distance. The more Fijians wear masks –– and wear them properly–– and adhere to physical distancing, the better chance we stand at becoming a COVID-Contained country once again.
I want to begin by clarifying some of the restrictions announced yesterday. High-risk businesses have been closed throughout Viti Levu, including in the Nadi and Lautoka Containment Area. We are widening that definition to include all of the following:
Gyms, movie theatres, video gaming shops, cyber cafes, taverns, bars, billiard shops and amusement arcades, as well as hairdressers, barber shops, spas, beauty therapy, massage therapy venues, saunas and tattoo parlours. The nature of these businesses means they cannot operate with proper COVID-safe protocols, including enforced physical distancing of two meters. They should all close everywhere on Viti Levu for at least the next 14 days.
The suspension of international passenger travel takes effect from midnight tonight, with the exception of Fijians travelling for medical purposes and other passengers as approved by the Permanent Secretary for Health and Medical Services.
Testing and contact tracing has continued through last night and into today. I want everyone to know from the start — we have not identified any new clusters of cases in the community.
We have confirmed that two of the children living in Wainitarawau Settlement are positive for COVID-19, a seven-month-old son and a 14-year-old daughter of the 40-year-old case announced yesterday. These two, along with the mother, father, and three other children are all in otherwise fine health in the Navua Hospital isolation ward.
Both children initially tested negative for the virus, on Tuesday April 20th, the day they entered isolation. That gives us a high degree of confidence that they are latent cases, which means they were entered into isolation before they became infectious. So, while the 14-year-old did attend school on Monday April 19th, we believe there is little chance that she passed the virus to others. However, out of an abundance of caution, we will be running a screening exercise based on the daughter’s movements.
I want to remind everyone that we identified this family because they made the patriotic decision to come forward and because they were honest with us about where they had been. Now they will all be getting the treatment they need, and they will no longer pose a risk to others. They deserve our thanks and nothing less. I’ve said before we need to erase the stigma around COVID-19––the virus is the problem, not any one person. We have to –– at all costs–– protect the privacy of Fijians living with the virus. As a Ministry, we rely on this information to contact trace, but there is no benefit to putting that information into the public space.
We’re talking about children here, some of the most vulnerable members of our society. They are anxious, they are scared, and the last thing they need is to have their privacy violated, and their information blasted out online.
The stigmatisation of Fijians living with COVID-19 has very real consequences––when bullies online take advantage of other people’s suffering, Fijians who should come forward may be scared into hiding their travel history, or hiding their symptoms. That culture of stigmatisation can put the entire nation at-risk. So please join me in saying thank you to this family, to the drivers, and to all those who have come forward as potentially having been exposed to the virus. And if you know you had exposure to someone living with COVID-19, please tell us. Call number 158. And stay home until our teams can check on you. Do it for yourself, do it for your family, do it for Fiji.
We have collected samples that will be tested for 200 people who attended the funeral at Tavakubu that was attended by the hotel staff case. We have not confirmed any new positive cases at this time. The window for transmission is still open, and our contact tracing for the funeral continues –– so that may change.
Nasomo in Tavua, has also been identified as a screening zone based on the movements of the case from Wainitarawau Cunningham after the funeral. The same rules established for the Wainitarawau Settlement apply here: No one is allowed to leave. Those who reside in the community may return, but they must stay there for at least the next 14 days.
We are still looking for the minibus driver who drove the hotel staff on the evening of the 17th of April from the Lautoka City minivan stand to Nadi at around 5pm, as well as the passengers of that minibus. After our investigation into the travel history of the mother in Wainitarawau Settlement, we are expanding our contact tracing to individuals who were at Saweni Beach from 10am to 3:30pm on Saturday 17th April 2021. If you were at Saweni Beach during that period, please call 158 right now. Stay home until the Ministry can check on you.
We also have six new border quarantine cases. One is a 38-year-old gentleman who arrived from Malaysia on April 8th. The other five are members of a family that arrived on 8th April from the Philippines, two other members of the same travelling family had tested positive during entry testing; this was announced on April 17th. All of these individuals tested negative on arrival. They did not test positive until the very end of their quarantine period. This is compatible with what the science tells us, that this virus can take up to 14 days to present itself, which is why we use that two-week timeframe as our containment window.
In total, there are now 19 active cases of COVID-19 in Fiji –– that is the highest number of active cases that Fiji has ever registered. 14 of these cases are at the border, and five are locally-transmitted cases. Around the world, these sorts of increases can signal an exponential outbreak on the horizon. While most of our cases are at the border, and the rest are securely in isolation wards, we still have to be prepared for that possibility in Fiji. Our testing lab is running 24/7, and we have substantial quarantine and isolation capacity available that is currently being expanded further as a precaution.
I hope to see our own precautionary steps shared more widely, particularly by the media. Last year, the media, for the most part, were our ally in our COVID-containment strategy. We saw facts-based reporting that helped get Fijians good information, and it was a big reason why we succeeded in containing our outbreak. But we’ve seen a troubling shift towards sensationalism from some outlets. We have seen reporters stalking our health officials, following them into high-risk areas, and rushing to publish half-baked stories with zero context from official sources.
Yesterday, FijiTV and Fiji Times trailed our health officials and members of our disciplined forces into what would later be established as a screening zone. Before we could make the medical assessment that would close off the area, these reporters were in the soon-to-be-screening-zone, speaking with people on camera and filming people’s homes. These reporters not only put themselves at-risk. Due to this being a highly-transmissible virus, that means that their family members and the country at-large were put at-risk as well. What these reporters have done was wrong. Morally and ethically it was wrong. From a public health perspective, it was wrong and it interfered with the good work the Ministry is doing. This isn’t a reality television show, we are dealing with an outbreak of a very deadly virus. Anyone who spends their time shoving cameras, recorders, or mics in the faces of potential COVID patients could end up becoming a COVID patient themselves, and strain the resources of the Ministry even further.
We give these updates every day. We are transparent about every action we are taking. Please respect the work we are doing and wait for official updates once the facts are clearly established. Don’t be reckless with your wellbeing, don’t be rash in your reporting. Lives depend on your responsibility.
Ladies and gentlemen, a shipment of 26,000 doses of COVID-19 AstraZeneca vaccines is in the country. We have amended our deployment schedule in light of the current health restrictions. Starting from tomorrow, individuals will be called to come forward on a set timetable to reduce crowding at administration sites. Our main focus is in Nadi due to its close proximity to the airport and quarantine facilities. We will be calling Fijians living with underlying health conditions that increase their risk of severe disease if they get COVID-19, as well as those working in high-risk professions, including retailers, hotel staff, drivers of taxis, minibuses and buses. Members of the media in Suva and in the West, as well as parliamentarians and parliamentary staff will also be called to come forward and be vaccinated. With these vaccines made available to these groups, the Ministry’s advice will soon be that media conferences in confined spaces, such as this one, as well as parliamentary sessions, will only be open to partially and fully vaccinated individuals.
I want to end by applauding the businesses that are opening today with proper COVID-safe protocols in place. Staff are masked, physical distance is being maintained, and all employees and customers are urged to download careFIJI, and switch it on. careFIJI has been downloaded more than 148,000 times as of today –– but we need more and we need everyone who has the app to keep it turned on. It will speed up contact tracing and save lives.
If you are working or shopping anywhere you feel COVID-safe protocols are not being followed––let us know. You can report your concern to Fijian Competition and Consumer Commission over e-mail at helpdesk@fccc.gov.fj.
Thank you to all those Fijians who are doing their utmost to aid my teams in containing the spread of this virus. Thank you to the businesses who have lent the Ministry vehicles and drivers to speed up contact tracing. It is in the best interest of every business in Fiji that we contain this outbreak quickly –– and we look forward to their cooperation and whatever support they can offer. Thank you to those who are sharing our advice on your social media pages to spread our messages across the country, especially our friends in the Fijian tourism industry. We cannot say how long it will take to defeat this virus. But the sooner we embrace the role we all must play in stopping the spread; the sooner we all adhere to good habits, like mask-wearing, and good hand hygiene, physical distancing; and the more time we all spend at home; the sooner Fiji will triumph over this virus once again. Do your part. I can assure you, every doctor, nurse, lab technician, and member of our disciplined forces will be doing theirs.
Thank you.
COVID-19 Situation Update – 22-04-2021

Media Release                                                                   

COVID-19 Update

Thursday April 22nd 2021

As announced by the Permanent Secretary today, we have 6 new border quarantine cases and 2 new locally transmitted cases of COVID-19.

The 2 new locally transmitted cases are the 14 year old daughter and 7 month old son of case 78, who is the 40-year-old female from Wainitarawau in Cunningham Suva; a close contact of the hotel quarantine worker (case 74). The children’s first test results, from samples collected on Tuesday April 20th, the day they were transferred to the isolation unit at Navua Hospital, were negative. These positive results are from repeat samples collected yesterday Wednesday April 21st. The test results indicate that the children are likely in the early stages of infection, and they were unlikely to be infectious when out in the community. However, as a precaution, contact tracing is being conducted for these 2 new cases.

For the 6 border quarantine cases: 5 are travelling family members of 2 border quarantine cases announced on April 17th. This family had travelled to Fiji from Manila, Philippines, arriving in Nadi on flight NZ952 from Auckland on April 8th. They tested positive during routine testing while completing 14 days of quarantine in a government supervised border quarantine facility. The 6th border quarantine case is a 38 year old male, who travelled from Malaysia to Fiji, also arriving in Nadi on NZ952 from Auckland on April 8th.

With these latest cases there are now 19 active cases admitted into hospital isolation units. Five are older border quarantine cases announced before Sunday April 18th. Nine are recently announced border quarantine cases, and five are locally transmitted cases linked back to the RFMF soldier who was infected in a border quarantine facility.

Total active cases in isolation= 19 (14 border quarantine cases and 5 locally transmitted cases)

There are also over 300 primary and secondary contacts of recent cases quarantined in border quarantine facilities in Nadi.

Fiji has had 86 cases in total, with 65 recoveries and 2 deaths, since our first case was reported on March 19th 2020. 63 of these cases have been international travel associated cases detected in border quarantine. And 5 recently announced cases are our first cases of local transmission in over 1 year.

A total of 44,481 COVID-19 laboratory tests have been conducted, with a daily average of 394 tests per day over the last 7 days, and a weekly average of 1892 tests per week over the last 2 weeks. Daily testing has increased in line with the response to the recent local cases, with 994 tests conducted yesterday.

There are currently 1063 people who have recently arrived from overseas undergoing mandatory 14 day quarantine in government supervised border quarantine facilities in Nadi.

-ENDS-

OUTBOUND PASSENGERS – THURSDAY 22 APRIL

OUTBOUND PASSENGERS ON REPATRIATION FLIGHTS FOR THURSDAY 22 APRIL ONLY

 The flights below for Thursday 22 April will depart as per time in the schedule below. Further international passenger air travel in and out of Fiji will remain suspended till further notice.

Scheduled flights for Thursday 22 April 2021:

Flight No. STD TIME @ CHECKPOINT
NZ953 2130HRS 1730HRS
FJ1411 1620HRS 1220HRS

For passengers on these flights, please note arrival times at the lockdown checkpoints in Nadi and Lautoka.

 INFORMATION FOR OUTBOUND PASSENGERS ON REPATRIATION FLIGHTS

Arrangements have been made for all outbound passengers traveling on repatriation flights for transfers from the main checkpoints on either side (Nadi and Lautoka) of the border to Nadi International Airport. All outbound passengers must have COVID 19 swab results (e-copy is accepted) with them.

Outbound passengers are advised to obtain a pass from the nearest Police Station, if they need to travel during curfew hours, by providing their travel Itinerary and swabbing receipt from the Ministry of Health and Medical Services.

All passengers are advised to present themselves at the lockdown checkpoint 4 hours prior to the flight departure. The Republic of Fiji Military Forces will make arrangements for the transfer of outbound passengers from the lockdown checkpoint to the Nadi International Airport.

 

 

Media Advisory – Passenger Travels

MEDIA ADVISORY

Information for inbound and outbound passenger transfers during lockdown of Nadi and Lautoka Area

The Ministry of Health and Medical Services advises the travelling public of travelling arrangements for all inbound and outbound passengers arriving and departing on repatriation flights.

This follows the announcement of the lockdown of the greater Nadi and Lautoka area due to the high risk of the transmission of the COVID 19 virus.

These arrangements are being made for the safety of all members of the travelling public and all residents of Fiji.

OUTBOUND PASSENGERS ON REPATRIATION FLIGHTS

Arrangements have been made for all outbound passengers travelling on repatriation flights for transfers from the main checkpoints on either side (Nadi and Lautoka) of the border to Nadi International Airport. All outbound passengers must have COVID 19 swab results (e-copy is accepted) with them.

Outbound passengers are advised to obtain a pass from the nearest Police Station, if they need to travel during curfew hours, by providing their travel Itinerary and swabbing receipt from the Ministry of Health and Medical Services.

All passengers will be advised to present themselves at the lockdown checkpoint 4 hours prior to the flight departure. The Republic of Fiji Military Forces will make arrangements for the transfer of outbound passengers from the lockdown checkpoint to the Nadi International Airport.

COVID-19 Situation Update – 21-04-2021

 Media Release                                                                   

COVID-19 Update

Wednesday April 21st 2021

As announced by the Permanent Secretary for Health and Medical Services today, we have 1 new case of COVID-19. This is a 40 year old female from Wainitarawau Settlement Cunningham in Suva who attended the funeral in Tavakubu Lautoka on Friday April 16th, and had contact with the 53 year old hotel quarantine worker case announced earlier. Along with 6 other members of her family she has been admitted to the isolation ward at Navua Hospital. These 6 family members have so far tested negative.

With this latest case there are now 11 active cases admitted into hospital isolation units, five are older border quarantine cases announced previously. The remaining six are the cases reported since Sunday April 18th, which includes 3 border quarantine cases and 3 locally transmitted cases.

Total active cases in hospital isolation units = 11 (8 border quarantine cases and 3 locally transmitted cases)

There are also over 300 primary and secondary contacts of recent cases quarantined in border quarantine facilities in Nadi.

Fiji has had 78 cases in total, with 65 recoveries and 2 deaths, since our first case was reported on March 19th 2020. 57 of these cases have been international travel associated cases detected in border quarantine. And 3 recently announced cases – the quarantine hotel worker, her daughter, and now this 40 year old contact in Suva, are our first cases of local transmission in over 1 year.

A total of 43,487 COVID-19 laboratory tests have been conducted, with a daily average of 252 tests per day over the last 7 days, and a weekly average of 1892 tests per week over the last 2 weeks.

There are currently 1043 people who have recently arrived from overseas undergoing mandatory 14 day quarantine in government supervised border quarantine facilities in Nadi.

-ENDS-