The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hong Kong foreign domestic workers ‘abandoned’ in virus crisis

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s foreign domestic workers are being ‘abandoned’ in the current coronaviru­s wave sweeping the city, with some forced to sleep rough or being denied treatment after testing positive, charities warned yesterday.

The Chinese financial hub is currently in the throes of its worst-ever coronaviru­s outbreak, registerin­g thousands of confirmed cases a day as hospitals reach breaking point.

Hong Kongers live in one of the world’s most densely packed cities and rely on some 370,000 foreign domestic workers, the vast majority women from the Philippine­s and Indonesia who cook, clean, and care for their families.

Foreign domestic workers must live with their employers, and are only entitled to one day off a week.

A coalition of groups representi­ng migrant workers said yesterday the already grim pandemic conditions have plunged further in the current outbreak.

Some workers had been sacked by employers after testing positive, forcing them to sleep outdoors. Others found themselves denied treatment at hospitals because they had lost their jobs.

Eni Lestari, an Indonesian domestic worker and activist, said her peers had been on the ‘frontlines’ helping families throughout the pandemic.

“Now we are being neglected, we are being denied services, we are being abandoned,” she told reporters.

“We are very alarmed and we are very angry,” she added.

Activists said many Hong Kong employers were refusing to let their domestic workers leave often cramped apartments even on their day off, while some had been fired for taking their rest day.

“For us staying home means we have to work,” said Dolores Balladares Pallaez from the Asian Migrants Coordinati­ng Body, adding workers needed ‘compassion and help’ from both the government and wider society.

The coalition said Hong Kong police had also ramped up social distancing fines each weekend for domestic workers, adding that penalties can be higher than their monthly wage.

Like mainland China, Hong Kong has stuck to a rigid zero-Covid policy that largely kept the virus out but left the internatio­nal business hub cut off for the last two years.

Those defences have now come crashing down with the highly infectious Omicron variant entry into the local community after infected flight crew and residents returned from overseas.

On Thursday, authoritie­s announced more than 12,000 positive cases.

Prior to the current outbreak, Hong Kong recorded just 12,000 infections for the whole pandemic. The current outbreak has caught the government off guard with few preparatio­ns in place for dealing with zero-Covid being breached.

Authoritie­s have since scrambled to locate thousands of hotel rooms and unused public housing blocks to isolate the infected as well as a location to build a temporary hospital.

It has also sought help from the Chinese mainland.

Authoritie­s are also considerin­g testing the entire city but no concrete details have yet been announced.

Local media have reported citywide testing might begin in March but by that time modellers predict Hong Kong may have as many as 28,000 cases a day.

It is also not clear where Hong Kong would house and isolate so many positive cases.

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