Anyone who tests positive for COVID in Hong Kong, including infants
and children, are put into isolation facilities with no family
contact allowed, as authorities enforce their "dynamic zero" COVID
policy.
As coronavirus cases hit record daily highs, the government plans to
roll out compulsory mass testing for the city's 7.4 million people
in March, exacerbating separation fears among many local and
expatriate families.
"Imagine the stress I'm having right now ... scared of having to
give birth alone, scared of them taking my daughters away, taking my
babies away, scared that if I'm positive, they are going to take me
away," said Guada, an Argentinian who has lived in Hong Kong for
3-1/2 years and has two girls aged 3 and 5. She declined to give her
last name due to the sensitivity of the situation.
Parents' worries have been heightened after authorities made an
infected 11-month-old isolate by herself in hospital.
In the past two weeks, authorities have reported the deaths of
several children who were infected with coronavirus, the youngest
another 11-month-old.
Diplomats in the global financial hub say they have repeatedly
raised concerns with the government over the issue of parents being
separated from children in a city with some of the world's most
stringent coronavirus measures.
The government did not respond to a request for comment.
Authorities have said they are overwhelmed and cannot accommodate
parents staying with infected infants as hospitals operate at
maximum or over capacity with close to 10,000 new daily infections
from nearly zero at the start of the year.
Parents can arrange video calls three times a day to stay in contact
with their young ones, health authorities said.
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"For me, it's very inhumane. I'm very afraid. I have a daughter aged
14 months, she doesn't speak, she doesn't know how our phone works,"
said a university lecturer who declined to be identified.
Medical clinic Central Health said isolating infants presented a
"significant risk" of child fatalities "as parents may delay taking
their children to hospital during critical periods when intervention
could save lives."
Some families, particularly in the expatriate community, have
decided to leave ahead of the mandatory coronavirus testing in
March.
While details of the testing remain vague, Hong Kong Chief Executive
Carrie Lam has said people will not be able to isolate at home if
they test positive and must go to government centres. Isolation and
quarantine centres are currently at their maximum capacity with
around 60,000 residents waiting at home to be admitted.
The government is building tens of thousands of new isolation units,
with the help of the Chinese government, compounding worries
families will be separated.
Hong Kong has recorded over 80,000 infections and over 400 deaths
since 2020, fewer than other major cities.
Spanish expatriate Veronica, who has lived in Hong Kong for nine
years and also declined to give her last name, said she was
distressed about the prospect of being separated from her
three-month-old.
"I'm worried about leaving him alone, I'm not worried about the
virus, I have the vaccine. I'm just worried about the situation,"
she said.
(Reporting by Farah Master; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and
Karishma Singh)
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