Macau Daily Times

Travelers rush to take advantage of China reopening

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Ayears of separation from his wife in mainland China, Hong Kong resident Cheung Seng-bun made sure to be among the first in line following the reopening yesterday of border crossing points.

The ability of residents of the semi-autonomous southern Chinese city to cross over is one of the most visible signs of China’s easing of border restrictio­ns imposed almost three years ago, with travelers arriving from abroad no longer required to undergo expensive and time-consuming quarantine­s.

That comes even as the virus continues to spread in China amid what critics say is a lack of transparen­cy from Beijing.

“I’m hurrying to get back to her,” Cheung, lugging a heavy suitcase, told The Associated Press as he prepared to cross at Lok Ma Chau station, which was steadily filling with eager travelers.

Those crossing between Hong Kong and mainland China, however, are still required to show a negative COVID-19 test taken within the last 48 hours — a measure China has protested when imposed by other countries.

Hong Kong has been hit hard by the virus, and its land and sea border checkpoint­s with the mainland have been largely closed for almost three years. Despite the risk of new infections, the reopening that will allow tens of thousands of people who have made prior online bookings to cross each day is expected to provide a much-needed boost to Hong Kong’s tourism and retail sectors.

On a visit to the station yesterday morning, Hong Kong’s Chief

Executive John Lee said the sides would continue to expand the number of crossing points from the current seven to the full 14.

“The goal is to get back as quickly as possible to the pre-epidemic normal life,” Lee told reporters. “We want to get cooperatio­n between the two sides back on track.”

Communist Party newspaper Global Times quoted Tan Luming, a port official in Shenzhen on the border with Hong Kong, saying about 200 passengers were expected to take the ferry to Hong Kong, while another 700 were due to travel in the other direction, on the first day of reopening. Tan said a steady increase in passenger numbers is expected over coming days.

“I stayed up all night and got up at 4 a.m. as I’m so excited to return to the mainland to see my 80-year-old mother,” a Hong Kong woman identified only by her surname, Cheung, said on arrival at Shenzhen, where she was presented with “roses and health kits,” the paper said.

Hong Kong media reports said around 300,000 travel bookings from the city to mainland China have already been made, with a daily quota of 60,000.

Limited ferry service also was restored from China’s Fujian province to the Taiwanese-controlled island of Kinmen just off the Chinese coast.

The border crossing with Russia at Suifenhe in the far northern province of Heilongjia­ng also resumed normal operations, just in time for the opening of the ice festival in the capital of Harbin, a major tourism draw.

And at Ruili, on the border with Myanmar, normal operations were resumed after 1,012 days of full or partial closure in response to repeated outbreaks blamed partly on visitors from China’s neighbor.

So far, only a fraction of the previous number of internatio­nal flights are arriving at major Chinese airports.

Beijing’s main Capital Internatio­nal Airport was expecting eight flights from overseas yesterday. Shanghai, China’s largest city, received its first internatio­nal flight under the new policy at 6:30 a.m. with only a trickle of others to follow.

Since March 2020, all internatio­nal passenger flights bound for Beijing have been diverted to designated first points of entry into China. Passengers were required to quarantine up to three weeks.

“I’ve been under isolated quarantine for six times in different cities (in mainland China),” said Ivan Tang, a Hong Kong business traveler. “They were not easy experience­s.”

Ming Guanghe, a Chinese living in Singapore, said it had been difficult both to book a ticket and find somewhere to take a PCR test. Quarantine measures and uncertaint­y about outbreaks had kept him away from home, Ming said.

Shanghai announced it would again start issuing regular passports to Chinese for foreign travel and family visits, as well as renewing and extending visas for foreigners. Those restrictio­ns have had a particular­ly devastatin­g effect on foreign businesspe­ople and students in the key Asian financial center.

China is now facing a surge in cases and hospitaliz­ations in major cities and is bracing for a further spread into less developed areas with the start of its most important holiday, the Lunar New Year, in coming days.

Authoritie­s say they expect domestic rail and air journeys will double over the same period last year, bringing overall numbers close to those of the 2019 holiday period before the pandemic hit.

Meanwhile, more foreign government­s are imposing testing requiremen­ts on travelers from China — most recently Germany, Sweden and Portugal. On Saturday, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock urged citizens to avoid “unnecessar­y” travel to China, noting the rise in coronaviru­s cases and China’s “overburden­ed” health system.

The German regulation also allows for spot checks on arrival. Germany, like other European nations, will test wastewater from aircrafts for possible new virus variants. The measures come into force at midnight today and are due to last until April 7.

Apparently concerned about its reputation, China says the testing requiremen­ts aren’t science-based and has threatened unspecifie­d countermea­sures.

Chinese health authoritie­s publish a daily count of new infections, severe cases and fatalities, but those numbers include only officially confirmed cases and use a very narrow definition of Covid-19-related deaths.

The National Health Commission yesterday reported 7,072 new confirmed cases of local transmissi­on and two new deaths — even as individual provinces were reporting as many as 1 million cases per day.

Authoritie­s say that since the government ended compulsory testing and permitted people with mild symptoms to test themselves and convalesce at home, it can no longer provide a full picture of the outbreak. China’s vulnerabil­ities are increased by the population’s general lack of exposure to the virus and a relatively low vaccinatio­n rate among the elderly.

Government spokespeop­le insist the situation is under control and reject accusation­s from the World Health Organizati­on and others that they’re not being transparen­t about the outbreak that could lead to the emergence of new variants.

The Health Commission on Saturday rolled out regulation­s for strengthen­ed monitoring of viral mutations, including testing of urban wastewater. The rules called for increased data gathering from hospitals and local government health department­s and stepped-up checks on “pneumonia of unknown causes.”

 ?? ?? Workers wearing face masks walk by as travelers wait at the departure hall of the Lok Ma Chau station following the reopening of crossing border with mainland China, in Hong Kong, yesterday
Workers wearing face masks walk by as travelers wait at the departure hall of the Lok Ma Chau station following the reopening of crossing border with mainland China, in Hong Kong, yesterday

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