Kuwait Times

Hong Kong reduces COVID quarantine for arrivals

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong will cut its hotel quarantine for internatio­nal arrivals from one week to three days from Friday, leader John Lee announced, in an easing of COVID restrictio­ns that have severely curbed travel. Once a global logistics and transporta­tion hub, Hong Kong has been largely cut off from the world for more than two years due to its adherence to China’s strict zero-COVID policy. Under some of the world’s tightest pandemic rules, Hong Kong had required overseas arrivals to undergo seven days of quarantine and repeated testing while confined to a room in a designated hotel, a restrictio­n that residents and the business community complained has deterred them from travelling.

Lee, Hong Kong’s ex-security chief turned city leader, announced Monday that the quarantine period for arrivals would be shortened to three days in a hotel plus four days of health monitoring at home or in a hotel of their choice.

“We hope to maintain livelihood activities and Hong Kong’s competitiv­eness, and to give the society the best developmen­t momentum and economic vitality,” Lee said. He denied the easing signalled any departure from China’s policy.

“Staying in touch with the outside world and working to resume quarantine-free travel with the mainland are no contradict­ion,” he said. Alongside the new quarantine arrangemen­ts, Hong Kong will implement a health code system similar to mainland China’s on a government-developed tracking app.

Under the system, an infected person will be given a red code that prevents them from leaving quarantine. Overseas arrivals will be given a yellow code and will not be allowed in places such as restaurant­s, bars, gyms and cinemas during their four days of self-monitoring. “The situation may give business visitors some relief but it is still not very attractive to tourists,” said Perry Yiu, a lawmaker responsibl­e for Hong Kong’s tourism sector. “I hope... we can get rid of mandatory hotel quarantine by the fourth quarter this year.” But a Hong Kong IT profession­al working in Singapore expressed caution about returning home. “I will adopt a wait-and-see model to see if the policy is stable,” said the man, who identified himself as Tom. “From the standpoint of a tourist, I will definitely not go.”

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