Bangkok Post

Macau sees lockdowns as infections rise

-

Local authoritie­s have locked down several residentia­l buildings as the world’s biggest gambling hub tries to contain a rising number of Covid19 cases that have ground the city to a halt, apart from casinos which mostly remain open.

The former Portuguese colony reported 39 new infections yesterday, bringing the total for its current outbreak to 149, with about a dozen buildings locked down and residents banned from leaving, the local government said in a statement.

More than 5,000 people are in mandatory quarantine, the government said.

Macau, a Chinese special administra­tive region, is testing its more than 600,000 residents for the coronaviru­s for a second time this week. Testing was due to finish yesterday.

A makeshift hospital, located next to Macau’s Las Vegas-modelled Cotai Strip, was also expected to open yesterday.

Macau shut down most of its city, including bars, cinemas, hair salons and outdoor parks on Thursday. Only takeaway is allowed from dining facilities.

The stringent measures come after Macau has been largely Covid-free since an outbreak in October 2021. It has not previously had to deal with the highly-transmissi­ble Omicron variant.

Macau adheres to China’s “zero Covid” policy which aims to eradicate all outbreaks, at just about any cost, running counter to a global trend of trying to co-exist with the virus.

Casino revenues are likely to be close to zero in the coming weeks, analysts said. Only one of the territory’s more than 30 casinos has been closed as an anti-Covid measure, but the others have few customers, residents said.

Macau’s cases are still far below daily infections in other places, including neighbouri­ng Hong Kong where cases have jumped to over 1,000 a day this month.

Hong Kong’s outbreak this year saw more than 1 million confirmed infections, and more than 9,000 deaths, swamping hospitals and public services.

Macau only has one public hospital with its services already stretched. The territory’s swift plan to test its entire population comes as it keeps open the border with mainland China.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People queue for Covid tests in Macau on Tuesday. China’s special administra­tive region is testing its more than 600,000 residents this week.
REUTERS People queue for Covid tests in Macau on Tuesday. China’s special administra­tive region is testing its more than 600,000 residents this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand