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Singapore
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Singapore’s Changi, world’s top rated airport sees immigration system restored after weekend delays

  • Although travellers were told to delay non-essential travel, there haven’t been any flight cancellations, according to data from Flightradar24.com
  • The glitch came two days after the city’s largest bank, DBS Group Holdings Ltd., suffered a 10-hour outage on its mobile-phone apps and online-banking

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Passengers queue at the departure hall of Changi Airport Terminal 3 in Singapore on March 31, 2023. The Straits Times/Lim Yaohui via Reuters
Bloomberg

Singapore’s immigration systems were largely back to normal after a disruption that caused delays at Changi airport and at land-border crossings just before the start of the weekend.

Although travellers were told to delay non-essential travel, there haven’t been any flight cancellations, according to data from Flightradar24.com. The glitch came two days after the city’s largest bank, DBS Group Holdings Ltd., suffered a 10-hour outage on its mobile-phone apps and online-banking.

Singapore’s Immigration & Checkpoints Authority said technical issues led to the disruption.

Passengers queue at the departure hall of Changi Airport Terminal 3 in Singapore on March 31, 2023. The Straits Times/Lim Yaohui via Reuters
Passengers queue at the departure hall of Changi Airport Terminal 3 in Singapore on March 31, 2023. The Straits Times/Lim Yaohui via Reuters

“Preliminary investigations found that there was a technical glitch during a pre-scheduled system upgrade, and this caused an unanticipated system overload,” it said in a Facebook post on Friday night.

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Singapore prides itself on efficiency and being a trusted business hub. Rated the world’s top airport for the 12th time by Skytrax earlier this month, Changi handled 68.3 million passengers in 2019, before the Covid pandemic decimated the global travel industry. Known for its indoor waterfall, butterfly garden and plethora of shopping outlets, Changi has also embraced automation to handle the large volume of passengers passing through the Southeast Asian hub.

Earlier, off-duty immigration officers were called in to manually process departing passengers at Changi with all the automated lanes affected, the border authority said. A representative for Singapore Airlines Ltd. said flights are currently operating as scheduled.

Live images from a government website earlier showed dozens of cars lined up on Singapore’s Woodlands and Tuas checkpoints on its land border with Malaysia.

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