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Hong Kong to Scrap Covid Hotel Quarantine on Monday

The city will scrap its hotel quarantine policy for all arrivals from Sept 26. All arrivals will be able to return home or go to accommodation of their choice, but must self monitor for 3 days


China will reopen to international travel on January 8, Beijing says.
China will drop its requirement for travelers to undergo quarantine in early January, when the country will also permit citizens to go abroad again. This image shows travellers queuing up for a shuttle bus to quarantine hotels at Hong Kong Airport, August 1, 2022. Photo: Tyrone Siu, Reuters.

 

Officials in Hong Kong said on Friday the city will scrap its Covid-19 hotel quarantine policy for all arrivals from Monday September 26.

All people arriving from overseas will be able to return home or go to accommodation of their choice, but will have to self monitor for three days after entering the Chinese special administrative hub, the officials said.

The move against the unpopular policy – long awaited by many residents and businesses – comes more than two and a half years after it was implemented.

People will be allowed to go to work or school but will not be allowed to enter bars or restaurants in the first few days after they fly in.

A pre-flight PCR test, required for travellers to Hong Kong 48 hours before flying, will be replaced by a Rapid Antigen Test.

The former British colony is a global outlier outside mainland China in imposing hotel quarantine for international arrivals, in line with the country’s “dynamic zero” Covid policy.

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Business groups, diplomats and many residents have slammed the city’s Covid-19 rules, saying they threaten Hong Kong’s competitiveness and standing as a global financial centre.

All international arrivals currently spend three days in a self-paid hotel followed by four days of self-monitoring where they are allowed to move around the city.

But earlier this year hotel quarantine lasted as long as three weeks before being gradually eased.

The rules have weighed on Hong Kong’s economy since early 2020 and fuelled an exodus of both expats and local families that was kick-started by Beijing’s efforts to exert control and limit freedoms.

Some 113,000 people have left since mid-2021, according to government figures.

Scores of flights have stopped operating to and from Hong Kong, which used to be one of the world’s busiest and most efficient airports.

The city has lost its position as a global aviation hub due to China’s zero-Covid policy, the head of airlines group IATA said this week.

Scores of events have been cancelled or postponed, although Hong Kong is planning to host a major finance conference and the international Rugby Sevens in November.

Bankers have said quarantine-free travel is a precondition for attending the conference.

Both events have been widely seen as a bid to show that Hong Kong can resume business as normal.

Rival financial hub Singapore is hosting a slew of high-profile conferences this month that has seen business for hotels and restaurants boom, while Taiwan and Japan announced this week an easing of Covid-19 restrictions for international travellers set to take effect in October.

Hong Kong has reported more than 1.7 million Covid infections and 9,934 deaths since the pandemic began.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

ALSO SEE:

 

Bank of Japan Set to End Covid Relief Funding Next Week

 

Covid Lockdown Extended for 16m in China’s Chengdu City

 

European Firms Warn of China Exodus if Lockdowns Drag On

 

Hongkongers Weigh Covid Curbs’ Economic and Mental Toll

 

 

 

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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