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Hong Kong Bans Some Flights, Tightens Covid Restrictions

Hong Kong announced a two-week ban on incoming flights from eight countries on Wednesday and tightened Covid-19 restrictions as authorities feared a fifth wave of the coronavirus


The cruise ship 'Spectrum of the Seas' is seen docked at Kai Tak Terminal in Hong Kong, on Oct 22, 2021. Photo: Tyrone Siu, Reuters.

 

Hong Kong announced a two-week ban on incoming flights from eight countries on Wednesday and tightened local Covid-19 restrictions as authorities feared a fifth wave of coronavirus in the city.

The latest restrictions were announced as health authorities scoured the city for the contacts of a Covid-19 patient, some of whom had been aboard a Royal Caribbean ship that was ordered to cut short its “cruise to nowhere” and return to port.

Incoming flights from Australia, Canada, France, India, Pakistan, Philippines, Britain and the United States, including interchanges, would be banned from January 8 to 21, Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam told reporters on Wednesday.

Lam said the government would ban indoor dining from 6pm on Friday, and close swimming pools, sports centres, bars and clubs, museums, and other venues for at least two weeks. Future cruise journeys would be cancelled.

But in-person classes at schools would not be suspended “for time being … for the benefits and the interests of the children and parents”, Lam said.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam. (AFP).

“We are facing a very dire situation of a major community outbreak anytime. And that’s why we have to take very decisive measures,” Lam told a press conference.

“We’re yet to see a fifth wave yet, but we’re on the verge,” she said.

The global finance hub has stuck to a zero-Covid strategy by largely isolating itself from the world and enforcing a draconian and costly quarantine regime.

On December 31, a streak of three months without community cases ended with the first local transmission of the new Omicron variant.

 

Covid Case ‘With No Known Links’

Since then, authorities have scrambled to track down and test hundreds of people who had been in contact with a handful of Omicron patients. One patient, however, had no known links, raising fears of a large outbreak.

“We are worried there may be silent transmission chains in the community,” Lam said. “Some confirmed cases had a lot of activities before being aware they got infected.”

The latest contact tracing campaign was sparked by a patient who danced with some 20 friends in a central park on New Year’s Eve. Two of the fellow dancers, one of whom was a domestic helper, came up positive in preliminary tests.

The helper’s employer and eight other of her close contacts then went on a cruise journey on Sunday January 2.

As part of its coronavirus restrictions, Hong Kong has restricted cruises to short trips in nearby waters, with ships asked to operate at reduced capacity and to only allow vaccinated passengers who test negative for the virus.

The “Spectrum of the Seas” ship, which returned a day early, had about 2,500 passengers and 1,200 staff on board. The nine close contact passengers were isolated from the rest of the people on board and preliminary tests taken during the journey returned negative results, authorities said.

“Spectrum of the Seas is taking appropriate measures under guidelines by the Department of Health,” Royal Caribbean said in a statement.

 

Compulsory Testing

The nine close contacts were sent to a quarantine centre, while the rest of the passengers and staff will have to undergo several compulsory tests in coming days, the government said.

Additionally, people who have been to dozens of places across Hong Kong around the same time as the close contacts of recent patients have been issued compulsory testing notices, the government said in a separate statement.

Victoria Park, in downtown Hong Kong, the newly-opened M+ modern art museum, ferry piers, restaurants, stores, clinics were among the places listed.

Gabriel Leung, University of Hong Kong dean of medicine and a government adviser, told public broadcaster RTHK there were probably “five-to-10 invisible transmission chains” in the city.

“There’s no time to waste,” Leung said. “We need circuit-breaker measures.”

Lam added: “We just need to stamp out this current outbreak quickly, then we can restart work on reopening the mainland border.

“This is why I said we were being very heavy-handed. We want to resume talks with the mainland, and have businesses open at Chinese New Year (on Jan 31).”

 

• Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

ALSO SEE:

 

China’s Zero Covid Policy to Unsettle Markets This Year: Eurasia

 

New Covid Variant Found in Hong Kong as Shanghai Cuts Tourism

China Covid Clampdown Locks Down Millions In Lanzhou

Covid-19 Closes Schools, Venues in China’s Dalian

 

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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