• Hong Kong can only fully reopen borders if Covid-19 vaccination rate improves, finance chief says | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3192122/hong-kong-can-only-fully-reopen-borders-if-citys

    Hong Kong can only fully reopen borders if Covid-19 vaccination rate improves, finance chief says. ‘It has been extremely challenging to strike a balance between curbing the pandemic and facilitating travel, while preserving the economy’, Paul Chan says Pandemic adviser to government predicts infections spread by more transmissible variants will peak in coming week
    Updated: 11:19pm, 11 Sep, 2022
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    Hong Kong can fully reopen to the world only if its Covid-19 vaccination rate improves further, the city’s finance chief has said, crediting effective pandemic control as the “fundamental stabilising force” of the local economy.Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po struck a cautious note on Sunday even as health officials reported the possible start of a downward trend in daily cases, and a pandemic adviser to the government predicted infections spread by more transmissible variants would peak in the coming week.“It has been extremely challenging to strike a balance between curbing the pandemic and facilitating travel, while preserving the economy,” Chan wrote on his official blog. “Only with concerted efforts to further expand the vaccination scheme will we have more leeway to resume international travel, stabilising the economy and restarting the impetus for growth to the greatest extent possible.”
    According to the government, 93 per cent of residents have taken a first vaccine shot, and 91 per cent have received a second, while 74 per cent have completed all three. But the rate for residents aged 80 or above remains just 67 per cent for two shots and a mere 51 per cent for three.
    Authorities have struggled to get those numbers up as infections have rebounded in recent weeks. Health officials on Sunday confirmed 9,033 new cases, of which 129 were imported, and 11 more deaths related to the virus. The city’s Covid-19 tally stood at 1,651,974, with 9,799 fatalities.
    Professor Lau Yu-lung, chair professor of paediatrics at the University of Hong Kong and who advises the government on the pandemic, forecast new infections would crest in the next three to seven days after plateauing at about 10,000 in the past week.The viral load in sewage had also shown signs of flattening, while the number of infected patients being treated in hospital between Thursday and Saturday had declined, he noted.
    “There might be a small rebound after the three-day holiday,” Lau said, adding that as long as residents adhered to social-distancing measures, the public had no cause for concern.
    If the vaccination rate among the elderly and those under five years of age both reached at least 80 per cent, the government might consider laying out a timeline for easing pandemic curbs, he suggested, predicting that could happen in November.The government last week announced the vaccine pass scheme restricting access to most public places would be expanded to require children as young as five be inoculated with at least one jab by September 30 and two shots by the end of November.
    Vaccine pass for kids from 5: what Hong Kong parents should know
    11 Sep 2022. As of Sunday, 2,711 Covid-19 patients were in hospital, including 54 in critical condition and 57 in a serious one. Hospital Authority Chief Manager Dr Larry Lee Lap-yip described the patient numbers as having “stabilised”.But the number of elderly sent to the makeshift treatment facility at AsiaWorld-Expo continued to rise, Lee noted, adding a plan to increase bed capacity from 240 to 280 after the holiday remained.
    “We dare not to let our guard down because based on our experience, changes, growth or declines in the pandemic can happen rapidly,” he said.
    Reacting to Chan’s blog entry, Travel Industry Council chairwoman Gianna Hsu Wong Mei-lun expressed hope that the government would provide a road map to further relax the “3+4” policy that requires arrivals to spend three days in hotel quarantine and four more monitoring their health at home.“Any quarantine measure is an obstacle to revitalise local tourism”, Hsu said, adding the current administration had always maintained that any easing of the rule would be based on scientific data on infection numbers but stopped short of stating what numbers would be acceptable or how a lower figure could be achieved.“When people travel, they need to tour around and enjoy the food. That’s how travelling should be. But if they have an amber code, even if the quarantine is cut to ‘0+7’ or even ‘0+3’, there is no way you could attract inbound travellers with such restrictions,” she said, referring to the vaccine pass QR code given to travellers upon arrival.
    Ray Chui Man-wai, chairman of the food and beverage industry group Institute of Dining Art, said the strategies the government had adopted to tackle the pandemic were “problematic”, noting the government had failed to set a target vaccination rate.“.
    Separately, authorities also made a change to the English-language version of information for people who tested positive posted on the website of the Centre for Health Protection. It now stated that anyone who tested positive using a rapid antigen test (RAT) “have to” report the results instead of only “can” report them.But Chuang clarified that reporting positive RAT cases was “not yet compulsory by law at the moment”.“[But] we would like the people to report so we don’t want them to feel like it’s optional,” she said.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#sante#honkong#pandemie#vaccination#frontiere#circulation#economie#quarantaine#test

  • Coronavirus: Hong Kong extends stricter social-distancing measures, flight bans on 8 countries through Lunar New Year, will provide HK$3.57 billion in subsidies to hard-hit businesses | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3163344/hong-kong-social-distancing-ban-evening-dine

    Coronavirus: Hong Kong extends stricter social-distancing measures, flight bans on 8 countries through Lunar New Year, will provide HK$3.57 billion in subsidies to hard-hit businesses.Hong Kong’s ban on evening dine-in services will be extended for two more weeks, through the Lunar New Year holiday, while industries hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic will be offered HK$3.57 billion in subsidies.Confirming an earlier Post report, Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor also announced on Friday a flight ban currently imposed on Australia, Canada, France, India, Pakistan, the Philippines, Britain and the United States would also be extended until February 4. The ban was first introduced on January 8.
    With the measures in place, Lam was still hopeful the long-awaited reopening of the border with mainland China was on the cards after the outbreak of the highly transmissive Omicron variant had stalled the plan.
    “The latest assessment is Covid-19 is not yet under control, there’s still a risk of a large-scale outbreak,” Lam told a press briefing on Friday evening. “If there is no major outbreak on February 4, we will restore business operations but they will be subject to vaccination requirements.”She said applications for the subsidies would open as soon as next week with the fifth round of pandemic relief focusing on two main groups.The first is businesses directly affected by the latest curbs such as restaurants, which cannot offer night-time dine-in services, and the beauty industry as well as hard-hit individuals such as gym instructors and freelance artists.
    The second group is industries that have remained “frozen” during the pandemic, such as the tourism sector and cross-border transport industry.
    Lam said that as the curbs would be in place for four weeks compared with up to 158 days for some industries during the fourth wave, the subsidy amount for businesses this time would be half of that during the previous round of relief. And for individuals, it would be two-thirds of that amount.
    The latest offerings add to the government’s subsidies of HK$162.3 billion via an anti-epidemic fund directly benefiting more than 20 industries in 2020 and 2021.The extension will put a damper on Hongkongers’ traditional festive dinners out, requiring them to instead celebrate at home until at least the fourth day of Lunar New Year – one day after the public holiday ends. Large-scale events, such as the Lunar New Year Fair, will also be affected. Stricter social-distancing measures, initially meant to last two weeks, were reimposed on January 5 in the wake of the emergence of an ongoing fifth wave of coronavirus infections.

    #Covid-19#migration#migrant#hongkong#sante#circulation#frontiere#zerocovid#tourisme#business#restrictionsanitaire#economietransfrontaliere

  • Separated from sick family members, Hong Kong’s poorest ask why business travellers should visit mainland China before they do | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3159397/separated-sick-family-members-hong-kongs-poorest

    Separated from sick family members, Hong Kong’s poorest ask why business travellers should visit mainland China before they do Quarantine too expensive for many to cross border, local NGO says, urging government to use half of initial travel quota for reuniting families City leader Carrie Lam has previously said business community will take priority when border gradually reopens, something expected to take place after coming Legco poll
    Low-income Hongkongers hoping to visit sick relatives in mainland China are calling on the government to give them equal priority with business travellers when the border begins gradually reopening soon.At least 10,000 residents urgently need to reunite with family members, but the city is treating them as an afterthought, according to Sze Lai-shan, deputy director of NGO the Society of Community Organisation (SoCO).“Its inhumane and unfair for those with families in need to be excluded from the [initial] cross-border quota,” Sze said on Sunday while urging the government to reserve half the slots for such visits.Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor last month said business travellers would take priority in the coming quarantine-free travel programme. Sze said numerous families were left disappointed and angry.The programme – initially limited to neighbouring Guangdong province – was expected to be launched shortly after the December 19 Legislative Council election, the Post reported earlier, though only a few hundred people a day were likely to be allowed to cross.At least 80 per cent of low-income families surveyed by SoCO in February indicated that they needed to visit the mainland regularly to take care of their families, with 70 per cent saying coronavirus border controls made helping them impossible.Another 15 per cent complained of being unable to return to attend the funerals of loved ones.At a Sunday press conference, low-income Hongkongers were moved to tears as they described the painful experience of not being able to reunite with ill or dying family members during the 21 months of the border being closed due to coronavirus restrictions.Many said they could not afford the expense of quarantine, including the need to apply for extended leave from work.
    Chen Haiyan, a 49-year-old bakery worker, said her father, 93, had a lung condition and was in such a frail state he had fallen several times. Her mother, who was in her 80s and dealing with eyesight issues, did not have the money to take him to a doctor.While her parents had typically taken care of each other, their health issues made it increasingly challenging to do so, according to Chen, who said border restrictions made it impossible for her to help.“My mother keeps asking when she can see me, as she misses me. I told her I want to go back so badly too, but it’s not possible, as quarantine is so expensive and my salary is too low. I can’t give her the money she needs,” said Chen, who works in a bakery.Chan Siu-bing, a resident in her 40s, said her mother in Guangdong had suffered a stroke last month and needed constant supervision, while her father had also recently undergone an operation.Chan, who has underlying health issues of her own, said: “I even took the vaccine in August despite my doctor not recommending it, just so I could go back. But even then, I’m still not allowed to do so.”Chan said she hoped she could soon travel to the mainland with her autistic 16-year-old daughter who was close to her grandparents.In calling for allowing families to cross the border on compassionate grounds, Sze suggested reserving 50 per cent of the any quota for needy residents, while noting the pandemic situation in Hong Kong and the mainland had stabilised in recent months.“In the past two years, [there has been an accumulation of] many family needs. In the beginning, 30 per cent of the quota could go to urgent family matters, and another 20 per cent for family visits,” she said. “Maybe after a certain period, the quota could then be increased.”

    #Covid-19#migration#migrant#hongkong#chine#sante#migrationtherapeutique#frontiere#circulation#quarantaine

  • Coronavirus: Hong Kong authorities set to unveil health code system, paving way for mainland China border reopening | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3158032/coronavirus-hong-kong-authorities-set-unveil

    Coronavirus: Hong Kong authorities set to unveil health code system, paving way for mainland China border reopening

    Hong Kong authorities are set to unveil a Covid-19 health code system on Thursday, paving the way for the long-awaited reopening of the city’s border with mainland China later this month, the Post has learned.
    Sources said the government would reveal details of the scheme, which would allow travellers to cross the border to Guangdong province and Macau without needing to undergo quarantine.The development comes after a meeting with mainland officials last week, during which the city was told it had met the “basic requirements” for border reopening, with only a few obstacles remaining, such as a health code app and further tightening of quarantine rules for aircrew.The move will bring the city more in line with mainland travel rules, but Hong Kong’s health code system is not expected to have a movement-tracking function, unlike the version across the border because of residents’ privacy concerns. A source said testing earlier this week of conversions of the Hong Kong health code to the Guangdong and Macau versions – needed when travellers cross from one jurisdiction to another – had been “very successful”, and a dry run of border openings had also been conducted and went smoothly.Francis Fong Po-kiu, honorary president of the Hong Kong Information Technology Federation, said he had learned from government and industry sources that authorities would not require all residents to integrate the existing “Leave Home Safe” risk-exposure app with the one for health codes, only travellers to the mainland would have to do so.
    To generate a health code, users will have to provide their real name and home address, as well as upload their vaccination record and Covid-19 test results.Users will have to export their visit records from the Leave Home Safe app over the past 21 days into a file, which will then be uploaded to the website. A self-filled health declaration form will also be needed.
    Once all the information is uploaded to the webpage, it will generate a colour-coded QR code, and the data will be sent to relevant government departments. The code will be scanned by border officers for those who need to travel to the mainland.Fong said he believed the Hong Kong version of the health code would not have real-time global positioning system (GPS) tracking because of technical limitations.The mainland version can store users’ travel history and generate a colour-coded warning system based on exposure risks to Covid-19 patients.Another component is the “itinerary code”, which tracks a user’s whereabouts using mobile phone signal data. This code makes use of data from three major telecoms companies on the mainland – China Telecom, China Unicom and China Mobile.It can show which countries or mainland cities a user has visited in the past 14 days. The code also captures the user’s movements with precision and stores the information for use by the authorities.
    But a code scheme has proved a controversial issue in Hong Kong, especially if it carries a movement-tracking function, over privacy concerns. The Leave Home Safe app, launched over a year ago last November, is a Covid-19 exposure notification device that allows users to scan QR codes outside buildings before entry and has since been made mandatory at government premises.Neighbouring Macau has its own health code system for border-crossing arrangements with Guangdong province and is regarded as a model for Hong Kong.Macau’s code does not have a tracking function, but generates coloured QR codes which indicate a person’s risk level based on their health status, possible contact with Covid-19 patients and travel history. The QR code, updated daily, is required to be displayed when people enter large public venues.It also allows users with negative test results to switch over to Guangdong’s health code system when they cross the border, but the two apps are not directly linked.Last Saturday, Macau launched a bus pass scheme that required passengers to register with their names to tap contactless stored-value cards when boarding a bus. Officials said the scheme could allow better Covid-19 contact tracing, and as of 10am on Tuesday, more than 165,000 people had registered online. It is uncertain this higher standard of tracing in Macau will increase pressure for Hong Kong to follow suit.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#chine#macau#hongkong#sante#QRcode#tracking#droit

  • Coronavirus: nearly half of Hong Kong’s convention, events sector could close if travel rules not eased, survey finds | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3147768/coronavirus-nearly-half-hong-kongs-convention

    Coronavirus: nearly half of Hong Kong’s convention, events sector could close if travel rules not eased, survey findsNearly half of Hong Kong’s exhibition and convention sector could face closure by the end of the year if authorities do not ease travel restrictions and roll out more subsidies, an industry survey has found.The Hong Kong Exhibition and Convention Industry Association, which released the report on Monday, urged the government to relax Covid-19 quarantine rules for eligible business travellers to attend events, conferences and conventions in the city.
    It warned that 45 per cent of event organisers, contractors, freight forwarders, travel agents, audiovisual equipment suppliers and design houses could fold within a year if current control measures remained and no financial aid was provided by the end of 2021.“The convention and exhibition industry, which contributed over HK$58 billion (US$7.5 billion) to Hong Kong’s economy in 2018, has been in deep water since February 2020 as no international event could be held in Hong Kong due to travel restrictions and preventive measures,” association chairman Stuart Bailey said.
    In its survey, conducted in August on 60 members, the association found event organisers and industry players were facing losses totalling HK$50 million this year.Despite keeping coronavirus cases at bay for months, health authorities have been adamant in maintaining a “zero-infection” policy in the hopes of reopening the border with mainland China.
    The city’s travel restrictions are among the strictest in the world, with arrivals from countries and regions deemed high risk facing 21 days of hotel quarantine.Last week, authorities announced Asia’s premier tech conference RISE would be held in Hong Kong for the next five years starting in March as an in-person event, promising 10,000 attendees. The conference was originally set to be held in Malaysia, but organiser Web Summit said that was no longer a feasible location because of logistical issues.However, Hong Kong’s government has not offered quarantine exemptions for the summit. According to the survey, all respondents said quarantine-free travel for overseas participants was important to their operations, with 75 per cent warning they would move international events elsewhere if Hong Kong insisted on its tough measures till the end of the year.Under the government’s Anti-epidemic Fund subsidy scheme, private organisers of events held at the Convention and Exhibition Centre in Wan Chai and the AsiaWorld-Expo in Chek Lap Kok near the airport are eligible for financial aid covering full venue rents until June 2022.However, organisers have had to postpone or cancel events, meaning they have been unable to benefit from the subsidies. The association said only 42 exhibitions had been awarded a total of HK$97.38 million as of June 30.
    The association called on the Commerce and Economic Development Bureau to provide more aid and prepare a road map for relaxing travel restrictions so the industry could plan ahead, warning the city could lose out to foreign competitors. In a reply to a Post inquiry, the bureau said it was aware of the survey and would continue to liaise closely with the sector to work on reinvigorating Hong Kong’s premier position as an international convention, exhibition and sourcing hub.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#hongkong#sante#economie#bussiness#pandemie#zerocovid#frontiere#circulation

  • Coronavirus: antibody testing triggers industry calls for Hong Kong to expand quarantine exemptions to more business sectors | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3138363/coronavirus-antibody-testing-triggers-industry

    Coronavirus: antibody testing triggers industry calls for Hong Kong to expand quarantine exemptions to more business sectors. Industry leaders say antibody screening supports the expansion of quarantine exemptions and relaunch of business travel. Authorities confirm the tests will be a further requirement for finance bosses seeking quarantine-free entry to Hong Kong. Industry leaders have urged Hong Kong officials to relaunch cross-border business activities in the city by expanding the Covid-19
    quarantine exemptions for financial executives to cover more sectors, arguing that antibody testing allows for a widening of the system.
    The calls to reopen Hong Kong to business travel were made on the back of a new antibody screening requirement being imposed on senior bankers and other top finance professionals seeking quarantine-free entry
    , while the government is also under pressure to extend the privileges to executives who are medically unfit for vaccination. Here’s how Hong Kong’s quarantine exemption works for financial executives
    “With this additional [antibody] test, the government should also expand its quarantine exemptions to other business sectors and allow exempted businesspeople to freely go about the city,” said Chan Kin-por, the city’s insurance sector lawmaker. “There should be a certain level of trust between the government and the exempted persons. There is no need to confine their activities.”
    Fully vaccinated senior executives in the finance industry can apply for an exemption to the quarantine arrangements required for arrivals to Hong Kong, subject to a series of conditions which has been expanded to include testing positive for coronavirus antibodies. The requirement was confirmed on Tuesday after city leader Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor announced a day earlier the halving of mandatory quarantine to seven days for all fully vaccinated arrivals from lower-risk destinations who passed antibody tests, taking effect as early as June 30.
    A spokesman for the Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau said the antibody testing requirement was in force with immediate effect for finance executives seeking quarantine exemptions. “The relevant test must be conducted by an accredited local medical laboratory, and a positive result is valid for three months,” he said. The spokesman said a positive result would reduce the self-isolation period for an exempted person from 14 to seven days

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#hongkong#sante#finance#economie#quarantaine#mesuredexception#restrictionsanitaire#circulation#frontiere

  • Coronavirus: Hongkongers may have to wait up to six months to resume travel, top tourism official warns | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3123814/coronavirus-hongkongers-may-have-wait-six-months

    Hongkongers may have to wait three to six months to travel again, and even then with conditions attached, despite the city recently launching its Covid-19 vaccination programme
    and the health crisis appearing to ease, according to a top official at the tourism board.Executive director Dane Cheng Ting-yat also said a wave of local tours and hotel staycation offers would soon be launched as part of the government’s HK$1.13 billion (US$145 million) drive to reboot the devastated industry.Until the third quarter, Hongkongers would be largely limited to spending holidays locally and rediscovering the city through outdoor activities, wandering around neighbourhoods, or taking staycations, he said.“My guess is in the next three to six months, only very slowly, certain conditional travel will be allowed,” the Hong Kong Tourism Board chief said in an interview with the Post. “Our assumption is that the pandemic is not going away this year, but vaccination can ease the outbreak to a large extent.”

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#hongkong#sante#tourisme#economie#pandemie#vaccination#circulation#frontiere

  • Cathay Pacific ‘optimistically’ predicts flying less than a quarter of pre-coronavirus flights for next eight months, with hopes hingeing on vaccine | South China Morning Post
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/hong-kong-economy/article/3106091/cathay-pacific-optimistically-predicts-flying-less

    Cathay Pacific Airways has warned its business throughout 2021 will still be less than half of what it was before the coronavirus crisis, with much depending on the availability of a viable vaccine, underscoring the uphill recovery facing airlines.In its September business update released on Monday, the airline said the first half of next year would be by far the toughest, anticipating flying less than a quarter of the schedule it ran ahead of Covid-19 grinding global travel to a halt. The forecast also gave a hint into the company’s future staffing requirements next year and beyond.
    Ronald Lam Siu-por, the group’s chief customer and commercial officer, said the carrier’s 2021 outlook was “already the most optimistic that we can responsibly adopt at this moment”. “We assume we will be operating well below a quarter of pre-pandemic capacity in the first half of next year, but will see a recovery in the second half of the year – only assuming the vaccines currently under development prove to be effective and are widely adopted in our key markets by summer 2021.”

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#sante#circulation#economie#crisesanitaire#vaccin