Hong Kong to order first lockdown in Kowloon area, media says

Published Sat, Jan 23, 2021 · 05:50 AM

Hong Kong

HONG Kong for the first time will lock down tens of thousands of residents in a bid to contain a worsening outbreak of the coronavirus, the South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported, citing unidentified people.

The lockdown is expected to begin this weekend in Yau Tsim Mong, the core urban district of Kowloon, local media outlets SCMP and HK01 reported Friday.

It covers a mandatory testing area where ageing buildings and sub-divided flats populated by lower-income families are common.

SCMP earlier indicated that parts of Sham Shui Po would also be locked down, but later updated to say the district would not be affected.

The benchmark Hang Seng Index dropped as much as 1.7 per cent after the report on Friday.

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Only residents who show negative Covid-19 test results will be allowed to leave the lockdown area, according to the SCMP report, specifying that exemptions will be allowed for those who need to seek medical consultation or face physical harm.

HK01 said each building would be guarded by government staff to ensure people leaving the building have a negative test result.

They will also send enforcement officials to each flat to ensure residents have taken a test.

The reported measures pale in comparison with the lockdowns adopted in mainland China, where a hardline approach bans people from leaving cities, districts or even their apartment complexes.

But it's the most severe step Hong Kong has taken to control the pathogen, and a blow to the government's approach of trying to keep the economy largely running during the pandemic.

Despite almost two months of social distancing, the former British colony's infection curve has ticked up again as colder weather and faster-spreading variants pose a greater threat.

The rise in cases, while far less dramatic compared with global cities such as London and New York, has spurred the government to put in place restrictions such as the closure of schools and some businesses. But until now, it has been reluctant to adopt stricter measures such as lockdowns, out of concern they could ignite a crisis in a city that has already been rocked by protests.

Even a limited lockdown in Hong Kong would introduce heavy restrictions of movement in the highly populated city with some of the smallest living spaces in the world - the average apartment is about 500 square feet.

It's not uncommon for poorer residents in the affected Kowloon areas to live in spaces big enough only for a bed, with communal kitchen and toilet facilities.

The lockdown neighborhood is located in an older, lower-income district of Kowloon, though the city's density means it's a stone's throw from glittering skyscrapers like the International Commerce Centre, where the offices of Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse Group AG are located.

The lockdown will only be lifted when the government is satisfied that everyone has been tested in the area, the SCMP report said.

Leung Chi-chiu, former chairman of the Hong Kong Medical Association's advisory committee on communicable diseases, said the more stringent measures are meaningless because cases are already being found outside the designated areas.

The spread will continue through cross-transmission within families and across multiple incubation periods, he said.

The stricter measures come as Hong Kong is set to roll out its vaccine programme, which could help to soothe anxious residents seeing inoculation efforts start earlier in mainland China and rival financial hub Singapore.

The government is expected to grant emergency approval for the Pfizer Inc-BioNTech SE shot soon after its expert panel recommended the green-light last week.

Hong Kong has seen 167 deaths from Covid-19. The heavier restrictions also come as neighboring city Macau reported the first imported case since June. BLOOMBERG

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