The Asian financial hub has been one of the most successful cities
in the world at containing the pandemic, with most cases imported
and quarantined immediately, and the discovery of new cases raises
worries of renewed local transmission.
The Chinese-ruled city re-opened bars, gyms and cinemas last week
and announced tentative plans to bring some students back to school
at the end of the month, but a ban on groups larger than eight
remains in place.
The lack of local transmissions in recent weeks has emboldened
pro-democracy protesters to resume demonstrations after a
coronavirus-induced lull, though their scale remains significantly
lower than last year when millions took to the streets for months in
sometimes violent anti-China unrest.
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The latest government health report, including two local cases - a
66-year-old housewife and her five-year-old granddaughter - and one
imported, brings the total in the city to 1,051, four of whom have
died. Only a few dozen have yet to fully recover.
Hong Kong, a former British colony, returned to Chinese rule in
1997.
(Reporting by Jessie Pang; Writing by Marius Zaharia; editing by
Nick Macfie)
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