South China Morning Post

STUDENTS HEADING HOME TO ESCAPE OUTBREAK-HIT HK

Worsening Covid-19 situation, lockdown fears and a move to online learning are among the reasons prompting many to return to mainland

- Kristin Huang kristin.huang@scmp.com

As Hong Kong grapples with a worsening Covid-19 outbreak and fears of a full lockdown grow, some mainland university students are fleeing the city.

Hong Kong has seen record daily case numbers and deaths in the latest wave, though infections fell for a second day on Sunday, to 31,008. A record 153 deaths were reported. Hospitals and mortuaries are overwhelme­d, people are panic-buying and universal testing is planned.

For university students, classes and exams are being held online – an arrangemen­t that will continue until at least the end of this semester. Universiti­es have also asked students to move out of dormitorie­s if they can as a precaution­ary measure.

Hong Kong is a popular destinatio­n for students from the mainland. Many come for postgradua­te studies, seeking a degree that will be more internatio­nally recognised, or wanting to broaden their network to advance their careers. There were about 40,000 mainland students enrolled in tertiary courses in the city at the end of 2019, according to the latest available data.

But as the pandemic situation in the city deteriorat­es, some are choosing to continue their studies at a distance from the mainland – where the virus has been largely under control – even if it means spending weeks in quarantine.

Zoey Chen, 23, started a master’s degree in linguistic­s at City University of Hong Kong in September. She left the city last week and is currently in hotel quarantine in Dongguan, Guangdong province. Chen plans to go back to her hometown in Hubei after quarantine.

“I decided to go back to the mainland after our university said classes would be conducted via Zoom for the whole semester,” Chen said. “I didn’t want to delay any longer because I was worried that with the worsening situation in Hong Kong, the mainland border could suddenly close.”

The shift to online learning and a fear of getting stuck in Hong Kong also prompted Wang Wuyou to move back home two weeks ago. The 22-year-old is in the final semester of a master’s in engineerin­g, also at CityU.

“You don’t know if you’re going to be exposed to the virus in Hong Kong. And also I was concerned that Hong Kong might impose a lockdown all of a sudden that would mean I wouldn’t be able to go back to the mainland,” Wang said from hotel quarantine in Shanghai. “That could affect my job-hunting plans.”

Wang and Chen said most of their mainland classmates had headed home. But some students, such as Linda Xi, have chosen to stay in Hong Kong.

Xi, 22, said it was a “no-brainer” after she was offered an internship by a non-government­al organisati­on in the city.

“I’d like to experience more of Hong Kong through this internship and then decide whether to go back to the mainland or not,” said Xi, who is studying for a master’s in internatio­nal journalism at Baptist University.

She was also concerned that learning online may not be as effective over an extended period.

And having studied in Singapore previously, Xi said she felt less concerned about the Covid-19 situation in Hong Kong.

“I’ve lived in a foreign country during the pandemic, on my own,” she said. “So I would say I’m feeling relatively calm at the moment.”

I decided to go back to the mainland after our university said classes would be conducted via Zoom

STUDENT ZOEY CHEN

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