Hong
Kong reports 25,150 new daily coronavirus infections
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[March 07, 2022]
HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong reported
25,150 new coronavirus infections and 280 deaths on Monday, as
authorities struggle to contain a worsening COVID-19 outbreak which has
torn through hundreds of nursing homes and hit many of the city's
unvaccinated elderly.
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While Hong Kong was successful in controlling the virus in 2021, it
has recently seen COVID-19 infections soar to a total of around
500,000. Most of the Chinese-ruled city's more than 2,200 deaths
have been in the past two weeks.
Health authorities said 161 of the deaths reported on Monday were in
the past 24 hours while 119 were older fatalities processed with a
delay.
Hong Kong reported the most deaths globally per million people in
the week to March 6, according to data publication Our World in
Data.
The figures come as the global financial hub clings to a "dynamic
zero" coronavirus strategy, which as in mainland China seeks to
eradicate all outbreaks. Many other countries are meanwhile shifting
to a strategy of co-existence with the virus.
The deluge of cases has swamped Hong Kong hospitals, isolation
centres and funeral parlours beyond capacity and left the healthcare
system, public transport, malls, postal services, supermarkets and
pharmacies struggling without staff.
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Anxious residents have emptied supermarkets
ahead of expected compulsory mass COVID-19
tests, with many shelves left bare for over a
week.
Many businesses including restaurants and stores
have shuttered, with main districts notably
quiet and few residents outside on the streets.
The city has implemented its most stringent
restrictions since the pandemic started in 2020,
with a ban on public gatherings of more than two
people and most venues closed. Flights into the
city are banned from most countries, including
the United States and Britain.
(Reporting by Twinnie Siu and Marius Zaharia;
Writing by Farah Master; Editing by Toby Chopra
and Catherine Evans)
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