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On our flight, the cabin was disinfected before the descent, with one member of the cabin crew walking down the length of the aisle spraying two canisters held high above her head. This stuff does smell quite strongly, even with a mask on, so it's not a bad idea to cover your eyes and mouth if you are sensitive to such things.
Before landing, all passengers (Chinese and foreign) are handed a health declaration form detailing travel over the previous 14 days, any potential contact with infected persons, and current health situation. (This in addition to the regular yellow arrival card that foreigners must complete and present to immigration. Try to carry a pen so as to avoid sharing one of the four kindly shared by the cabin crew among the entire plane.)
Health declaration form (English), PTO...
Health declaration form (Chinese)
Before getting to customs, everyone must have their aforementioned health declaration form checked. Although the five or so unmarked lines had all the markings of a scrum on the cusp, this portion was surprisingly orderly and efficient.
They may look long but the lines move quite quickly, just as long as you've filled in your form
Go through an infrared temperature check and then on to immigration. Before you've even reached a window you'll be asked if you have visited either South Korea, Italy, Iran, or Japan in the past two weeks. As of Mar 3, these are all considered high-risk countries and anyone who has visited them will be required to conduct a 14-day quarantine, according to the rules of your residential compound. What that means for tourists with pre-booked accommodation is unclear but from what we could tell, anyone who had visited one or more of these countries was to provide additional information on where exactly they visited on the back of their arrival card.
With any luck, you will be able to move through customs without too much hassle so that you can return home, where you should commit to a two-week self-quarantine – even if you don't have to.
READ: Travel Out of Beijing Strangled as Air Routes Canceled and Ride Sharing Restricted
Images: Tom Arnstein, The State Council of the People's Republic of China
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