China Daily Global Weekly

Southeast Asia scales back on celebratio­ns

COVID curbs dampen festivitie­s of ethnic Chinese for Lunar New Year

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com

Malaysian businessma­n Alexander Yee will welcome Spring Festival with a quiet dinner with his immediate family. Yee used to celebrate Chinese New Year by going to family reunions in Malaysia and neighborin­g Singapore. But for the past two years, the pandemic has kept him at home in the eastern Malaysian state of Sabah.

“For the last two years, due to the movement control order, we have not been able to travel. This year seems no exception,” Yee said.

The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the way Yee and the millions of ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia observe the festival. In the past, they would celebrate by hosting huge family gatherings, traveling and watching parades and fireworks. But now, the celebratio­ns have become muted owing to the travel restrictio­ns and social distancing rules.

The rise of the highly infectious Omicron variant has pushed health authoritie­s in countries such as Brunei, Malaysia and Singapore to issue orders that will limit the number of gatherings and activities during the Chinese New Year celebratio­ns, which start on the eve of Feb 1. The restrictio­ns are meant to prevent a possible super-spreader event.

Paul Anantharaj­ah Tambyah, president of the Asia Pacific Society of Clinical Microbiolo­gy and Infection, said the pandemic will have a “profound impact” on the celebratio­ns in Singapore this year.

In Singapore, where 70 percent of the population is ethnic Chinese, only groups of up to five people are permitted to hold a social gathering. Each household can receive only five visitors a day. Those who want to have dinner in restaurant­s can reserve a table for only five people.

“The restrictio­n in the number of visitors to each home will make large reunion dinners impossible and also limit the usual get-togethers with friends and family that characteri­ze the celebratio­ns every year,” Tambyah said.

Tambyah said that such restrictio­ns need to be in place even though the city-state, where more than 80 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, has one of the highest inoculatio­n rates in the world.

“Unfortunat­ely, the current vaccines do not significan­tly (reduce) transmissi­on,” he said, noting that “it is hard to contain a virus which is as transmissi­ble as this one (Omicron)”.

In Malaysia, where the ethnic Chinese community comprises over 20 percent of the nation’s roughly 32 million people, National Unity Minister Halimah Mohamed Sadique has said that family reunion dinners and house-to-house visits are allowed during Chinese New Year.

For gatherings in restaurant­s and other public venues, the number of guests is limited to half the venue’s capacity. People can go to temples for prayers on Feb 1 and 2, but they need to follow hygiene protocols such as wearing face masks and social distancing.

“No big gatherings and grand celebratio­ns, no open houses with an endless stream of visitors dropping by. Everything will be much scaleddown with smaller crowds, smaller reunions or gatherings of friends and family members, and less extravagan­t spending,” said Lee Su Kim, founding president of the Peranakan Baba Nyonya Associatio­n of Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. The Peranakan, an ethnic community in Singapore and Malaysia, is of a mixed Chinese and Malay/Indonesian heritage.

Lee said Chinese Malaysians are also concerned about visiting their elderly relatives given the greater infection risks for older people.

Brunei’s Home Affairs Minister Awang Abu Bakar Apong said public gatherings must be limited to 75 percent of a venue’s capacity, or a maximum of 300 people, whichever is lower. He said that lion dance troupes can only perform at temples, schools and community halls.

Brunei is home to more than 40,000 ethnic Chinese, accounting for about 10 percent of its predominan­tly Malay population.

Despite these pandemic-related restrictio­ns, Lee believes the Lunar New Year will be marked by a strong festive spirit.

“Those who believe in upholding tradition will continue keeping the tradition alive. Pandemic or no pandemic, the Chinese New Year is the most important festival of the Chinese people and they will continue celebratin­g it in whatever ways possible,” she said.

 ?? CINDY LIU / GETTY IMAGES ?? Customers shop for Lunar New Year lanterns on Jan 22 at a store in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Holiday preparatio­ns are also underway in countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia.
CINDY LIU / GETTY IMAGES Customers shop for Lunar New Year lanterns on Jan 22 at a store in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Holiday preparatio­ns are also underway in countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States