South China Morning Post

Vaccine holdouts are to blame for Omicron chaos

Peter Kammerer says those who refuse to receive one of the Covid-19 jabs have put themselves and others around them at deadly risk of infection

- Peter Kammerer is a senior writer at the

Omicron was bound to rampage through Hong Kong, just as it has everywhere else. What I didn’t expect was the government’s incompeten­t response. Sticking firmly to its belief that it can vanquish the coronaviru­s in all its forms from the city’s boundaries, it ignored the ample evidence from overseas of what could be expected.

But while it is tempting to blame officials for the resultant chaos, those really at fault are the people who refused to get vaccinated.

The death toll from the fifth wave of the city’s Covid-19 epidemic is appalling. Most of those who succumbed have been in their 50s and older, although the numbers in their teens and younger are equally devastatin­g. The vast majority have not been jabbed.

There is ample evidence that vaccinatio­n prevents serious illness. Some whose condition is precarious shouldn’t get a shot; that is a doctor’s call. But, for the sake of self-protection and to control the spread of the disease, as many as possible have to be inoculated.

The government was quick to procure enough vaccines and has for 13 months made them available for free. It went further than many other jurisdicti­ons, offering old technology and new, Chinese and Western, through Sinovac and BioNTech. While the latter has a better efficacy, their differing side effects ensure that all can be catered for.

Vaccinatio­n has not been made mandatory and it is up to individual­s whether they get a jab, a good compromise in a city where surveys have long shown trust in the government is low. But while getting a jab has been a matter of choice, those who have refused have been putting themselves and others around them at risk. That has been obvious in care homes for the elderly and disabled, where the virus has rampaged. The initial low death figures may have given people a false sense of security that they would not be affected, while a lack of faith in vaccines or the government may also have been factors.

The government’s Covid-19 policies are flawed; the present outbreak and dire impact on the business community are proof

A crowded and cramped city like Hong Kong is an ideal environmen­t for a virus such as Covid-19 to run amok. For that reason, health officials should have known Beijing’s mandated “dynamic zero” strategy was not appropriat­e for dealing with the variant, readied a backup plan and given clear messages to residents of what to do. Instead, they persisted in treating every case as an emergency, no matter how minor the symptoms.

Public hospitals and quarantine centres were quickly at capacity and, as the death toll mounted, morgues became unable to cope. In the midst of the turmoil, authoritie­s confirmed plans for mass testing and the arrival of mainland advisers and workers gave the impression that days-long, mainland-style lockdowns were at hand.

Senior officials failed to give the clear and concise messages such worrying times necessitat­e. Hong Kong’s famed Lion Rock spirit inevitably kicked in, with people opting to take matters into their own hands and care for themselves.

The rush for rapid antigen testing kits and self-isolation has hidden the true scale of the epidemic. Streets are nearly empty and shops stripped of items considered essential. All of that could have been avoided if authoritie­s had been better prepared.

The government’s Covid-19 policies are flawed; the present outbreak and dire impact on the business community are proof. Politics would seem to be too often put before science. Mass testing during an Omicron surge makes no sense and the amount of time, effort and expense could be put to better use.

But at the root of the matter lies the failure of too many people to get vaccinated. Getting a jab now cannot offer immediate protection. The clock can’t be turned back for those who have died or are suffering, and for people regretting the flawed advice they gave deceased relatives.

Hongkonger­s, unlike their mainland counterpar­ts, have open access to a world of informatio­n and are able to choose their own course. That too many have done so without regard for others in the community is a travesty.

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 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Funeral home staff load a body into a van while a patient is treated in a hospital car park.
Photo: AFP Funeral home staff load a body into a van while a patient is treated in a hospital car park.
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