The Philippine Star

HK scraps last COVID mask mandate

HONG KONG (AFP) – Hong Kong residents will finally be able to leave home without a face mask from Wednesday, nearly 1,000 days after the pandemic mandate was imposed.

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Face coverings will no longer be required indoors, outdoors or on public transporta­tion, the government announced, ending a measure that has become a relic globally as the world adjusts to living alongside the coronaviru­s.

Hong Kong was one of the last places on Earth to enforce mask-wearing outside, with violators facing hefty fines.

”I’m ready to get rid of this,” Tiffany, a finance industry employee in her 20s, told AFP. “It costs money to buy masks, and I have had COVID myself.”

The mask move comes as the government tries to woo tourists and overseas talent back to revive the recession-hit economy.

”With the masking requiremen­t removed, we are starting (to resume) normalcy comprehens­ively. And that will be very beneficial to economic developmen­t,” Chief Executive John Lee said at yesterday’s morning press conference.

He added that hospitals and homes for the elderly can impose their own requiremen­ts if they decide masks are needed.

Public health experts had increasing­ly questioned the need for a mask mandate in a city where several waves of COVID infections have likely conferred a high level of immunity.

Lawmakers called it harmful to schoolchil­dren. And tourism experts and business groups warned it was undercutti­ng the city’s global image.

”Making it illegal not to wear one is frankly anachronis­tic by now,” University of Hong Kong virologist Siddharth Sridhar tweeted on Sunday.

The masking policy also appeared to clash with the government’s eagerness to demonstrat­e the city was back to business as usual, with Lee promising to welcome visitors with “no isolation, no quarantine and no restrictio­ns” during the “Hello, Hong Kong” campaign launch earlier this month.

The maskless dancers in the campaign’s promotiona­l video attracted criticism online for distorting the reality of a city where face coverings were ubiquitous and enforced with fines of up to HK$10,000 ($1,275).

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