The Star Malaysia

No more travel curbs

China to fully reopen borders with Hong Kong and Macau

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Hong Kong: China said it will fully restore travel across its borders with Hong Kong and Macau, dropping Covid testing requiremen­ts and daily quotas after a lengthy pandemic separation.

The semi-autonomous cities have both stuck to Beijing’s zero-covid strategy for nearly three years, splitting families, cutting off tourism and suffocatin­g businesses.

The State Council’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office said yesterday that all remaining restrictio­ns would be dropped starting midnight Feb 6, with group tours allowed to resume.

Limited travel across the border between Hong Kong and mainland China resumed in January after Beijing abruptly axed its isolationi­st policy.

Initially, only 60,000 people were allowed to cross each day in either direction and they were required to show a negative PCR test.

Hong Kong leader John Lee said yesterday that the partial reopening had been “orderly, safe and smooth”.

Hong Kong’s lengthy separation from its biggest source of growth inflicted a heavy toll, with some estimating it cost the financial hub Us$27bil (Rm115bil).

Mainlander­s have long made up the vast majority of visitors to Hong Kong, with around 51 million arriving in 2018, nearly seven times the city’s population.

City officials are hoping an influx of visitors will revitalise the recession-hit economy, injecting cash into the once-vibrant tourism and retail sectors.

Unvaccinat­ed overseas travellers will be allowed to visit Hong Kong starting Monday, but Lee said pre-arrival rapid antigen tests will still be required.

“As the full reopening of the border with mainland China will bring a large surge in travel, to ensure risks are manageable we will keep the testing requiremen­t for overseas travellers for a period of observatio­n,” he said.

The full relaunch of travel with the mainland comes a day after Lee rolled out a rebranding campaign to woo overseas tourists, pledging more than half a million free flights and “no isolation, no quarantine and no restrictio­ns”.

Outdoor masking remains compulsory in Hong Kong, though Lee said the policy could be scrapped after the winter flu surge.

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