KL closes some Top Glove plants after workers test positive
28 factory buildings will be shut in phases after 2,453 workers tested positive for coronavirus, from 5,767 screened
Kuala Lumpur
MALAYSIA will close some of Top Glove's factories in stages as it moves to screen employees for the novel coronavirus after more than 2,000 workers tested positive, authorities said on Monday.
The world's largest maker of latex gloves has racked up record profits this year on sky-rocketing demand for its products and protective gear, thanks to the pandemic.
But 28 factory buildings will be shut in phases after 2,453 workers tested positive for the virus, from 5,767 screened, said director-general of Health Noor Hisham Abdullah.
"All those who tested positive have been hospitalised, and their close contacts have been quarantined to avoid infecting other workers," Mr Noor Hisham said. Most of the total 2,524 positive cases in the cluster were factory workers, of whom 2,360 are foreigners and 164 are Malaysians, he added.
Senior Security Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob said that on the health ministry's advice and risk evaluation, the government has agreed that some of Top Glove factories be closed in stages, to allow further screening and quarantine. He did not say when the closures would begin, however.
Top Glove said in a stock exchange filing that it has temporarily stopped production at 16 facilities in the area since last Wednesday, with the balance of 12 facilities operating at much reduced capacities.
"We have completed full screening of about 5,700 workers at our hostels. We are committed to proceed with the (health ministry) recommended Covid-19 screening test of the balance (of) workers and staff at our factories in Meru, Klang," it said.
Last week, the government ordered 14-day curbs till Nov 30 in parts of a district about 40 km west of the capital Kuala Lumpur, where Top Glove factories and dormitories are located.
Analysts had said the curbs did not change earnings forecasts for the company but they could re-assess projections if infections at the factories rise sharply and curbs are extended. REUTERS
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