Hong Kong to ease strict COVID curbs after business backlash
Send a link to a friend
[March 21, 2022]
By Farah Master and Jessie Pang
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong plans to
relax some anti-COVID-19 measures next month, lifting a ban on flights
from nine countries, reducing quarantine and reopening schools, after a
backlash from business and residents.
The moves, announced on Monday by Chief Executive Carrie Lam, come as
many countries shift to trying to living with the virus rather than
trying to keep it out.
Residents in the Chinese-ruled territory have become increasingly
frustrated with the stringent measures, many of which have been in place
for over two years.
A ban on flights from Australia, Britain, Canada, France, India, Nepal,
Pakistan, Philippines and the United States will be lifted from April 1.
"The flight ban is no longer timely and appropriate...it will bring huge
disturbances to Hong Kong people who are stuck in these nine countries
if we continue the ban," Lam told a news briefing.
Hotel quarantine for Hong Kong residents arriving into the city could be
cut to seven days from 14 if they tested negative, Lam said. She had
previously said measures would be in place until April 20.
Schools would resume face to face classes from April 19 while public
venues including sports facilities would also reopen from April 21, she
said.
Hong Kong's border has effectively been shut since 2020 with few flights
able to land and hardly any passengers allowed to transit, isolating a
city that had built a reputation as a global financial hub.
Hong Kong has registered the most deaths per million people globally in
recent weeks – more than 24 times that of rival Singapore - due to a
large proportion of elderly who were unvaccinated as the highly
transmissible Omicron variant ripped through care homes.
The densely packed city has recorded more than a million infections
since the pandemic started and about 6,000 deaths - most of them in the
past month. Authorities reported 14,068 new cases on Monday and 223
deaths.
As many as 4 million people, out of a population of 7.4 million, could
be infected according to estimates from health experts as many residents
have contracted the virus and isolated at home without notifying
authorities.
[to top of second column]
|
A flight attendant walks under an information board at the arrivals
hall of Hong Kong International Airport, following infections of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Hong Kong, China January 11, 2022.
REUTERS/Lam Yik
Businesses and the city's economy
are reeling from widespread closures, while doctors say many
residents are grappling with rising mental health issues,
particularly among low-income families.
Lam's policy turnaround comes after her
administration has been scolded repeatedly by politicians,
pro-Beijing media and on Chinese social media, just weeks before the
city is due to hold an election on May 8 to choose who will lead the
territory for the next five years.
She declined to comment on whether she will run for a new term.
EXIT STRATEGY
A plan to carry out mass coronavirus testing would be put on hold,
Lam said, citing experts who said it was not a suitable time. Hong
Kong needs to have a clear exit strategy rather than trying to
completely eradicate the virus, experts said.
While the former British colony has officially stuck to the "dynamic
zero" coronavirus policy, similar to mainland China, which seeks to
curb all outbreaks, it has been shifting to mitigation strategies as
deaths skyrocketed.
Lam said social distancing measures would be eased in phases
starting April 21, allowing restaurant dining after 6 p.m. with
tables of four people from two currently.
Nightclubs, pubs and beaches would be allowed to open in the second
phase while people would be allowed to exercise outdoors without a
mask. Masks are currently compulsory everywhere outside the home.
Until this year, Hong Kong had been far more successful at
controlling the coronavirus than many other cities its size, but the
latest wave of infections swamped its world class medical system,
morgues are overflowing and public confidence in the city government
is at an all-time low.
(Reporting by Farah Master, Twinnie Siu, Jessie Pang, Anne Marie
Roantree and Queenie Garcia; Editing by Christopher Cushing, Simon
Cameron-Moore and Nick Macfie)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|