The global financial hub reported a new record of 8,798 daily
coronavirus infections, health authorities said, with 50 COVID-linked
deaths in the past 24 hours.
Hong Kong has registered over 400 deaths since the pandemic first
started over two years ago, less than other similar major cities.
Residents are now mandated to show their vaccine record to access
venues including supermarkets, shopping malls and restaurants, a
major inconvenience in a city where malls link train stations to
residences and office buildings.
Separately, city leader Carrie Lam used emergency powers granted
under British colonial-era laws to exempt mainland Chinese staff and
projects from any licensing or other legal requirements to operate
in Hong Kong.
City authorities have asked their mainland Chinese counterparts for
help to build additional isolation, treatment and testing
facilities, and boost the workforce as Hong Kong's health system is
increasingly overwhelmed.
"Hong Kong's healthcare system, manpower, anti-epidemic facilities
and resources ... will soon be insufficient to handle the huge
number of newly confirmed cases detected every day," the government
said in a statement.
On Wednesday, Hong Kong reported a record 8,674 new COVID-19
infections as the global financial hub prepares for compulsory
testing of its 7.4 million people - part of its "dynamic zero COVID"
strategy similar to mainland China's.
Allowing mainland doctors to practice in Hong Kong has been a
controversial issue in the global financial hub, which for decades
had some of the toughest licensing standards as a way to preserve
excellence in its public health system.
The city last year passed a law allowing overseas-trained doctors to
practice without taking a local licensing exam, in a move contested
by many local doctors.
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Hong Kong's medical frontlines have been
weakened sharply by the latest outbreak, with
around 1,600 medical staff infected as of
Thursday. Authorities said 30%
of ambulance calls received on Wednesday were from people with mild
or no symptoms, further overburdening hospitals operating at maximum
or over capacity.
The government also tightened restrictions from Thursday in a city
that already has some of the most stringent rules in the world.
Residents will have to wear masks for all outdoor exercise and will
not be allowed to remove them to eat or drink on public transport.
With bars, gyms and other businesses already closed and shopping
malls deserted while many residents work from home, the government
said on Tuesday schools would break early for summer and resume the
new year in August.
Many in the city are growing fatigued with the situation, as most
other major cities learn to live with the virus.
As the urgency grows, construction work has started on a facility on
Lantau Island to build about 10,000 isolation units, while private
hospitals will take in patients from public hospitals.
With the city's testing, treatment and isolation capacity already
stretched to the maximum, University of Hong Kong researchers
predicted new infections could peak at 180,000 a day next month.
(Reporting by Anne Marie Roantree, Marius Zaharia, Jessie Pang and
Farah Master; Editing by Lincoln Feast, Jane Wardell and Kim Coghill)
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