Joyful reunions as Malaysia-Singapore land border reopens

Joyful reunions as Malaysia-Singapore land border reopens

SeattlePI.com

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JOHOR BAHRU, Malaysia (AP) — Malaysians working in Singapore held joyful reunions with their loved ones after returning to their homeland on Monday following the partial reopening of a land border that has been shuttered for nearly two years due to the pandemic.

Buses ferried fully vaccinated passengers across the Causeway Bridge that connects the island of Singapore with the Malaysian peninsula, with strict measures in place including pre-departure and on-arrival COVID-19 tests.

Malaysian Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin tweeted that a COVID-19 case was detected during the screening in southern Johor state, but didn't elaborate. “As we safely reopen our borders, there will be positive cases at points of entry. Risk assessment, isolation and monitoring close contacts will become the norm," he said.

Under the first phase, only 1,440 travelers who must be citizens, permanent residents or long-term pass holders are allowed from each side per day. The Causeway was one of the world’s busiest land borders before the pandemic struck. Air travel also reopened Monday with fewer restrictions, allowing anyone who is fully vaccinated to travel quarantine-free between the two countries.

“It's already since past one year plus, I never meet her and when I see her today, I'm happy, I'm very happy," retiree Siva Ganesan said after greeting his wife, Uma Devi Balakrishnan, at the bus terminal in southern Johor state. His wife works as a cleaner in Singapore and was stranded when borders were shut.

A Malaysian man kissed and hugged his baby whom he met for the first time, while another woman sank tearfully into her father's arms. More than 100,000 Malaysians were believed stuck in the island-state after the border closed in March 2020.

“It's surreal, doesn’t feel real at all because...

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