Hong Kong leader plans to reopen city only after controlling latest
COVID outbreak
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[March 10, 2022]
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong
leader Carrie Lam said on Thursday it was not the time to lift a ban on
flights from nine countries including the United States and Britain,
with plans to reopen the city only after the government controls a
deepening coronavirus outbreak.
The global financial hub has some of the most draconian restrictions in
place to combat a surge in coronavirus cases that has seen the city
suffer the most deaths globally per million people in the week to March
7, according to the Our World in Data publication.
Total infections have surged to about 600,000, including about 3,000
deaths - most in the past two weeks.
Health authorities reported 31,402 new cases on Thursday, and 180 deaths
in the past 24 hours.
The Chinese territory has had its borders effectively sealed since 2020
with few flights able to land and most passengers banned from
transitting.
"This is not the time to lift the ban. A lot of people will rush to come
back...there will be infected cases and that will add a lot of pressure
to our public hospital system," Lam said.
Her comments come a day after she announced a shift in her government's
approach to tackling the coronavirus, devoting more medical resources to
elderly people as infections and deaths climb rapidly amongst the city's
mainly unvaccinated seniors.
Hong Kong's government had previously focused its resources on
identifying, treating and isolating all cases, even those that are
asymptomatic and mild, adding pressure on its hospitals and healthcare
system.
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A general view of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) isolation facility
in Tsing Yi, amid the COVID-19 pandemic in Hong Kong, China, March
9, 2022. Picture taken with a drone. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Until recently, the government said
it was focusing its efforts on carrying out compulsory mass testing
for Hong Kong's 7.4 million residents sometime this month.
Contradictory messages from authorities over the
scheme and plans for a city-wide lockdown have sparked panic buying
by residents, who have been emptying supermarket shelves for over 11
days.
There was now no time frame for the testing, Lam said on Wednesday.
The change in approach came after a top Chinese official said that
Hong Kong had to prioritise reducing infections, severe illnesses
and deaths.
Hong Kong, like mainland China, has adopted a "dynamic zero"
strategy that seeks to curb infections with strict mitigation
measures. The approach has been severely tested by the fast
spreading Omicron variant.
China has seen a rise of locally transmitted coronavirus infections
reporting 402 for March 9, nearly doubling from the daily count a
day earlier.
(Reporting by Farah Master, Twinnie Siu, Marius Zaharia, Jessie Pang
and Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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