Quarantine enforcement and Covid-19

Quarantining is a significant interference with rights, which is why it is only recommended to be done under the advisement of health professionals.

In the context of Covid-19, quarantining is now being done based on profiles. In Hong Kong, authorities are requiring the use of a bracelet and an app for all travellers. 

The Home Quarantining app the Polish government requires regular check-ins. South Korea's app uses GPS to track locations to ensure against quarantine breach, sending alerts if people leave designated areas. Singapore requires people to report their location with photographic proof. Thailand is using an app and SIM cards for all travelers to enforce their quarantine. Ecuador is reportedly using GPS data on mobile phones. 

Lower-tech solutions are also being used. India is stamping the hands of people ariving at airports to specify the duration of their quarantines. In Serbia, the police and military will reportedly monitor people in quarantine. Vietnam is using a network of informants. And public shaming is another form: in Montengro social media users have been been publicly naming patients.

08 May 2020
At a press conference, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu suggested that microchipping everyone, beginning with children returning to school and kindergarten as the coronavirus lockdown ends; the chip would sound an alarm whenever anyone gets too close much as a car does. Security experts
08 May 2020
Among the regulations governing restaurants as the US State of Maine's moves into a phased reopening is a requirement to maintain customer records for contact tracing purposes, including one customer's name and contact information per party and those of the table's server. The regulations also
01 Apr 2020

The Myanmar Ministry of Union Government Office, Ministreay Health and Sports, Ministry of Transport and Communications, and youth tech expert Ko Htoo Myint Naung have collaborated on a mobile app to monitor people ordered to quarantine, adapted from other similar apps developed in countries such as South Korea. The app, which is available in Myanmar and English, allows both citizens and foreign residents to report on their health condition. Mobile operators will provide free SIM cards and 1GB of internet data for people under quarantine. A database of all registered and quarantined people will be used to build appropriate action plans.

Writer:  Myanmar News Agency
Publication: Global New Light of Myanmar
 

30 Apr 2020
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