The Borneo Post

HK scraps mandatory vaccines for foreign domestic workers

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong yesterday scrapped a plan to make coronaviru­s vaccines mandatory for foreign domestic workers after the proposal sparked an outcry and a diplomatic tussle.

But authoritie­s ordered all foreign helpers to undergo another round of mandatory testing, triggering renewed criticism from the Philippine­s.

Health officials planned to roll out mandatory inoculatio­ns for the 370,000 domestic workers in the city, mostly poorly paid women from the Philippine­s and Indonesia.

Those wanting to apply for work visas – or renew their current ones – would need to show they had received two doses.

But yesterday city leader Carrie Lam announced a U-turn.

“The government has decided not to request mandatory vaccinatio­n when helpers renew their contracts,” she said, adding the decision had been made after meetings with officials from the Philippine­s and Indonesia.

Philippine foreign affairs secretary Teodoro Locsin had previously said the initial proposal “smacked of discrimina­tion”.

Hong Kong health officials announced the mandatory vaccinatio­n plan and the testing of all domestic workers last month after two were found to be infected with one of the more virulent strains of the coronaviru­s.

They said domestic workers were “high risk” because they often work with the elderly and meet in parks on Sundays – usually their one day off a week.

Labour groups representi­ng domestic workers said they felt they were being singled out, noting that the families they worked for – as well as locals working in environmen­ts such as care homes – were not required to get vaccinated.

They also pointed out that wealthier foreign migrants such as the city’s white-collar financial workers were not forced to get vaccines when outbreaks of the coronaviru­s were traced to their well-heeled districts.

The last round of compulsory testing saw long queues form at facilities across the city. Three coronaviru­s cases were uncovered over nine days.

Lam said yesterday all nonvaccina­ted helpers would be ordered to undergo a second round of testing by the end of the month.

“We have to take precaution­s before any possible outbreaks, as we had found some infectious Covid-19 variants in the community,” Lam said.

But that decision sparked fresh anger with a Philippine­s diplomat warning it would “not go down well with the community”.

“I questioned the necessity of another mandatory test, citing the near-perfect compliance of domestic workers to the initial mandatory test,” Consul General Raly Tejada told the South China Morning Post, describing recent meetings with Hong Kong officials.

Thanks to strict quarantine measures and economical­ly painful social distancing rules, Hong Kong has kept infections to just under 12,000 cases and 210 deaths.

It has secured ample vaccine doses but the public take-up has been very low.

So far, just 16 per cent of the city’s 7.5 million people have received one or more doses, a long way from the 60-70 per cent considered necessary for herd immunity.

Regular polling shows Hong Kongers have some of the lowest support ratings for inoculatio­n in the world.

Some of Hong Kong’s BioNTech/Pfizer vaccines will pass their shelf life in September and officials fret they may be in the unenviable position of throwing away good doses. —

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