No Covid test on arrival at Washington Dulles
Airport!
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
August 03, 2021
I was surprised to note that there was no
mandatory Covid testing required on my return to
Washington Dulles International on August 1,
2021. The departure test result from Ghana, of
all places, was accepted by the US government as
sufficient.
Reverse the journey, going from the US to Ghana,
and the requirement is very different.
A mandatory test would be required, even
though you took one in the US and tested
negative.
The mandatory testing in Ghana has been
explained in various ways.
The one from Dr. Okoe-Boye of the Ghana Covid
Task Force is the most interesting.
He offered bluntly that Ghana being a
sovereign state, could do what it needed to do
to keep the people safe.
To base what has happened so far, with mandatory
Covid testing in Ghana, on sovereignty rights is
as ridiculous as providing an excuse for the
stench in your powder room after use.
Rather, Covid testing should be a matter of
common sense.
And why?
Coming from the US, or another sovereign state
abroad, and knowing that you have already tested
negative at origin, only to be subjected to
another test some 72 hours later in Ghana is
bewildering enough.
And the bewildering should not be about the test
result, as some have experienced.
It should be at the idea of the mandatory
second test itself, shortly after or within 72
hours of an already successful, negative test.
Before I left the US for Ghana, I tested for
Covid and was negative.
On arrival in Ghana, I was subjected to a
mandatory test that cost $150.
It turned out negative.
Are we by this test stating that the
regime applied In Ghana is more scientifically
advanced than that obtained elsewhere,
especially in first world countries?
For a fact, one can never argue that any test
for Covid in Ghana would be more scientifically
correct than one performed in the US.
What can be argued morally is that Ghana, though
a sovereign state, is an impecunious one.
We, therefore, have the moral reason to
collect the revenue to help fight Covid; an
imported disease.
So, if you want to visit Ghana, you come to help
combat the disease.
After that, it will be the turn of Ghana to be
transparent with the Covid money collected and
how this went to help combat the disease.
Dr. Okoe-Boye’s argument that Ghana, a sovereign
state, has the right to conduct the mandatory
test to protect its people and for public health
reasons, must negate the fact that similar
arrivals from Ghana to countries with the same
sovereignty rights, but more advanced than Ghana
on the scientific tier, do not require mandatory
retesting for Covid.
His argument beggars common sense or makes the
sovereignty issue he advanced odd.
As for his attempt to cancel out Diasporan
complainants, he ought to know that the
complainants are not doing so because they are
from the Diaspora and should know better.
They are complaining because of what is
happening on the ground in Ghana, concerning the
testing.
On my return to the US, the test from Ghana was
good enough to allow me entry.
There was no need for the US to exercise
its sovereignty rights to demand a retest that
has already be done outside, in my case in
Ghana.
This odd situation in Ghana has allowed some
Diaspora citizens to suspect corruption:
To be specific a sham mandatory demand to
fleece travelers.
Also, what must be obvious to all by now is the
justifiable need for government to raise the
money in this poor country to fight the disease.
But this need does not override the
corruption aspect that the mandatory demand
draws in.
The government gets its share of the loot.
What the money collected is used for
presently is another matter, one that must be
the concern now, not the sovereignty issue
raised.
If most of the money raised from the exercise
goes directly to benefit the fight against
COVID, many of us will be first to hail this
government as one of the most moral.
But where money is concerned in Ghana, the
corruptive intent cannot be ruled out.
It may even be the dominant drive behind
the exercise.
What is needed at this stage is for the
Covid Task Force to be transparent about the
money collected.
The cost is $150 per passenger, non-citizens, on
arrival.
For the return, there is another test for
the approximate cost of $45.
There is also a case of Covid levy of 1% on
purchases registered at stores.
From all this, plus the number of passenger
arrivals on flights on daily basis in Ghana, one
can conclude that Covid has become an income
stream generator for the government.
Again, if the intent is to use the money for
COVID combat, all the better for the nation.
In 2020, at the height of the Covid infections,
arrivals and departures at Accra International
totaled 702,651, according to Traffic
Statistics, Ghana Airport (Traffic
Statistics – GACL)
Travels to and from Ghana are back with
vengeance in 2021.
A rise in traffic by 50% on the figures
from 2020, can bring the total to over 1 million
passenger arrivals, which will still be lower
than the 2 million-plus recorded in 2019.
Indeed, monies collected on arrivals could have
gone to fight Covid, if the exercise was based
on both moral grounds and sovereign rights.
It could have gone to support the
purchasing of more vaccine doses, excluding
corruption.
As of July 21, 2021, the number of vaccine doses
administered so far was 1,271,000, under 5% of
the population.
The revenue stream from Covid could have
gotten more than twice the number vaccinated.
Even at the fraudulent $19 cost per vaccine unit
offered by the government, we could still have
purchased more doses with the additional revenue
stream from the mandatory Covid testing on
arrivals than the government has managed to
purchase on its own so far.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com,
Washington, DC, August 03, 2021.
Permission to publish:
Please feel free to publish or reproduce,
with credits, unedited.
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