Business Day

Hong Kong relaxes some of its tough Covid-19 lockdown curbs

- Iain Marlow and Natalie Lung Hong Kong

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam moved on Tuesday to ease curbs on social gatherings and other coronaviru­s measures, as a lull in infections set the stage for fresh political battles over the future of the Asian financial hub.

Lam raised the number of people permitted at restaurant tables to eight from four, and said gyms and cinemas would be allowed to reopen. Bars would also reopen with capacity restrictio­ns. Live music performanc­es and dancing will not be permitted. The changes would go into effect on Friday. Schools would also resume in phases from May 27.

“Experts are of the view it’s time to relax some of the measures to some extent,” she told reporters. “But I must stress that the epidemic may flip-flop in a way, and we must remain vigilant continuous­ly.”

While relaxing socialdist­ancing measures vindicates Hong Kong’s strategy to fight the virus, it also could facility the return of pro-democracy protests that rocked the former British colony last year.

Activists have held several demonstrat­ions in recent days, and opposition legislator­s are hoping to rebuild political mobilisati­on will that can help them secure a majority on the city’s elected legislativ­e council in September.

Even as Lam prepared to relax the virus curbs, two of her predecesso­rs led a news conference to announce a new “Hong Kong coalition” of 1,500 business leaders and pro-establishm­ent figures. The group led by former CEOs Tung Chee-hwa and Leung Chun-ying said they wanted to promote economic recovery, oppose violence and support the “one country, two systems” China has used to govern the city since the British left in 1997.

The group’s supporters includes the city’s richest man,

Li Ka-shing, and his sons Victor Li and Richard Li, as well as members of the Kwok family, which owns the city’s largest developer Sun Hung Kai Properties. It was unclear what role the organisati­on would play in elections, though it planned an event on Saturday to distribute masks.

“It’s for election purposes, to kind of help street-level mobilisati­on and also on the government campaign theme against the democrats,” said Ma Ngok, a professor at Chinese University of Hong Kong’s department of government and public administra­tion. “They’re trying to take advantage of the economic situation,” Ma said. “That’s kind of a conservati­ve tone, which I think is in line with the propaganda of the pro-Beijing press in recent weeks.”

The Asian financial hub, which had its worst economic quarter on record, has mostly contained Covid-19 through social-distancing measures from late January, travel restrictio­ns, contact tracing and mandatory quarantine­s.

Hong Kong reported no new cases for 10 days and no virusrelat­ed deaths since mid-March. Nearly all newer infections were people who had travelled recently.

1,500 business leaders and pro-state figures behind new coalition

0 number of new virusrelat­ed deaths since mid-March

 ?? /AFP ?? Virus status report: Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, second from left, briefs reporters on the city’s Covid-19 situation at government headquarte­rs on Tuesday.
/AFP Virus status report: Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, second from left, briefs reporters on the city’s Covid-19 situation at government headquarte­rs on Tuesday.

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