Toronto Star

Elite get taste of their own pandemic policies

- IAIN MARLOW

One day in quarantine was all it took for pro-China lawmaker Junius Ho to condemn the harsh, knee-jerk pandemic restrictio­ns his government has imposed on Hong Kong citizens for nearly two years.

“The government’s work is completely out of line!” Ho wrote on his verified Facebook page, after learning he’d been needlessly quarantine­d over a false positive COVID-19 case at a party of some 200 people he attended last week with dozens of political elites. “I could have asked my driver to pick me up!” he said, bemoaning his sudden release to a local subway station, after less than 24 hours in isolation.

Ho’s reaction, and the revelation that politician­s flouted their own guidance on avoiding mass gatherings to attend the Jan. 3 birthday celebratio­n of an official with ties to Beijing, has sparked schadenfre­ude among weary Hong Kong residents snickering at well-to-do aristocrat­s who are finally experienci­ng the weight of their own restrictio­ns.

Even fully vaccinated residents have long lived in fear of a 21-day quarantine apart from their families and homes for fleeting contact with a positive case, and been frustrated by strict border controls that prohibit travel and stifle internatio­nal business. Meanwhile, members of the ruling class have been hopping over the mainland China border without isolation — Ho went to Shenzhen just days after the party — and ignoring their own dictates. One minister at the party, Immigratio­n Minister Au Ka-wang, was already fined last year for attending a dinner in violation of COVID rules.

The episode has stoked public anger in a city where many residents view the government as run by outof-touch officials only concerned with pleasing China. Beijing last year overhauled the city’s electoral system to install a legislatur­e loyal to the Communist Party, and imposed a national security law that has prompted authoritie­s to lock up dozens of opposition candidates and shutter critical media outlets.

“It’s quite symbolic of Hong Kong’s situation,” said Chung KimWah, deputy CEO of the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute, about the scandal-hit party. “The whole government is becoming less and less accountabl­e to society.”

Top-tier behaviour

Public outrage in Hong Kong is growing as more details emerge about the birthday of Witman Hung, an IT profession­al and investor who has political ties to the mainland and serves as the local representa­tive for the Shenzhen Qianhai Authority, which manages a nearby economic zone. It comes as the city imposes new restrictio­ns, such as closing bars and beaches, in a dogged pursuit of a COVID Zero strategy to eliminate all cases as much of the world attempts to live with the virus.

One Hong Kong resident with the surname Wong who runs a financial consulting firm in the city said he was disappoint­ed by reports that not all party attendees used the LeaveHomeS­afe contact tracing app, which the government has made mandatory at restaurant­s.

But Wong wasn’t surprised by the vast number of political elites in attendance, including Police Chief Raymond Siu and Home Affairs Secretary Caspar Tsui, even after Health Secretary Sophia Chan called on the public to avoid such events days before. “That is a shadow of how the top-tier class of society works,” Wong said.

High-society housewives

Twenty lawmakers also stopped by the party, jeopardizi­ng their ability to attend the first session of the “patriots-only” legislatur­e installed in a December vote that attracted the city’s lowest turnout ever.

Some of the city’s biggest COVID outbreaks have been linked to high society. Hong Kong’s largest supersprea­der event was caused by rich businesswo­men and housewives who frequented elite dance clubs, while the city’s first community omicron cases last month were imported by Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. crew who abused a coveted three-day home quarantine.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam, who must soon announce whether she’ll run for a second term next year, has vowed to take “appropriat­e action” and ordered investigat­ions into the 13 ministers at the party. If a breach of discipline is confirmed, authoritie­s in Beijing have told Lam to either suspend, demote, or even dismiss the officials, the South China Morning Post newspaper reported Monday.

‘Building sandcastle­s’

For some government critics, the episode has offered a refreshing and rare reprieve from recent curbs on free speech in the former British colony.

“People very much enjoy talking about this because they can criticize the officials concerned freely, and it has nothing to do with the national security law at all, so it’s safe,” said Joseph Cheng, a veteran activist and retired political science professor who left Hong Kong when the security law passed.

Others are hoping Hong Kong’s strict quarantine rules might change now that top officials have experience­d the policies that snatch healthy citizens from their work, home and families and put them in bare-bones accommodat­ion for long stretches of time.

The government has already allowed some officials to serve quarantine­s at home, according to the SCMP, but it was unclear whether that would be extended to ordinary residents in the future — or was just another perk for the political class. Late on Monday, an official announced that quarantine for close contacts of COVID cases would be reduced to 14 days from 21 days due to the increasing pressure at government-run facilities.

“They should stay here for a night and experience like us,” Ho said in a Facebook Live from quarantine. As he prepared to leave his room, the lawmaker called the city’s anti-pandemic measures “as useless as building sandcastle­s on a beach.”

‘‘ It’s quite symbolic of Hong Kong’s situation. The whole government is becoming less and less accountabl­e to society.

CHUNG KIM-WAH DEPUTY CEO OF THE HONG KONG PUBLIC OPINION RESEARCH INSTITUTE, ON THE SCANDAL-HIT PARTY

 ?? KIN CHEUNG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Two legislativ­e council lawmakers receive vaccines. Pro-Beijing leaders are among those who’ve been caught up in Hong Kong’s serious quarantine — prompting objections from them.
KIN CHEUNG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two legislativ­e council lawmakers receive vaccines. Pro-Beijing leaders are among those who’ve been caught up in Hong Kong’s serious quarantine — prompting objections from them.

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