PAL special flight from Xiamen carrying travel ban-stranded Filipinos arrives
By Ariel Fernandez
A Philippine Airlines (PAL) special flight carrying 124 passengers, including some 51 Chinese holders of permanent visa, arrived Monday at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) Terminal 2 on board PAL Airbus 321.
More than hundred passengers of PAL special flight from Xiamen arrived at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) Terminal 2 (Ariel Fernandez/MANILA BULLETIN)
According to PAL Spokesperson Cielo Villaluna, special flight PR 335 from Xiamen, China with six cabin crew and two pilots landed at 1:16 pm Monday, carrying some 73 overseas Filipino workers stranded in Xiamen by the travel ban, as well as 51 Chinese with permanent visas, including five children.
The aircraft flew to Xiamen at around 7:31 a.m. also on Monday, carrying some 100 Chinese nationals and tourists who had likewise been stranded in the Philippines after the government imposed a ban on travel to and from mainland China and its special administrative regions, as part of anti-coronavirus precautions.
The Airbus 321 landed at Xiamen around 9:45 a.m., departed Xiamen 11:05 a.m., and arrived at NAIA 1:16 p.m.
Villaluna said that upon landing the aircraft proceeded to the remote parking area where four PAL co-buses were waiting. The passengers were brought to the bus gate of Terminal 2 and underwent quarantine and immigration procedures.
Quarantine doctors and nurses used portable thermal scanners to scan every passenger to ensure that no one was suffering from fever before they were allowed to leave the airport terminal.
The special flights are part of PAL’s public service to their foreign and local passengers.
More than hundred passengers of PAL special flight from Xiamen arrived at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) Terminal 2 (Ariel Fernandez/MANILA BULLETIN)
According to PAL Spokesperson Cielo Villaluna, special flight PR 335 from Xiamen, China with six cabin crew and two pilots landed at 1:16 pm Monday, carrying some 73 overseas Filipino workers stranded in Xiamen by the travel ban, as well as 51 Chinese with permanent visas, including five children.
The aircraft flew to Xiamen at around 7:31 a.m. also on Monday, carrying some 100 Chinese nationals and tourists who had likewise been stranded in the Philippines after the government imposed a ban on travel to and from mainland China and its special administrative regions, as part of anti-coronavirus precautions.
The Airbus 321 landed at Xiamen around 9:45 a.m., departed Xiamen 11:05 a.m., and arrived at NAIA 1:16 p.m.
Villaluna said that upon landing the aircraft proceeded to the remote parking area where four PAL co-buses were waiting. The passengers were brought to the bus gate of Terminal 2 and underwent quarantine and immigration procedures.
Quarantine doctors and nurses used portable thermal scanners to scan every passenger to ensure that no one was suffering from fever before they were allowed to leave the airport terminal.
The special flights are part of PAL’s public service to their foreign and local passengers.