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City Beat
Hong KongPolitics
City Beat
Tammy Tam

Vaccination is the means, don’t forget the end goal of making Hong Kong Covid-safe for the economy to take off

  • Uncertainty over mutant strain, difficulties achieving ‘zero infection’ goal leave Hong Kong’s hoped-for economic rebound in limbo
  • If Hong Kong continues to be considered a high-risk destination for mainlanders visiting the city, and they will still have to go through quarantine upon returning home, the government’s plans will be put to the test

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People queue up for BioNTech Covid-19 jab at Sun Yat Sen Memorial Park Sports Centre in Sai Ying Pun. Photo: Nora Tam
Tammy Tam is the Publisher of the South China Morning Post, overseeing both editorial and business strategy and operations to drive the publication’s development and commercial growth.
Just when there seemed to be a glimpse of light at the end of the tunnel in Hong Kong’s year-long fight against the Covid-19 pandemic, the shadow of uncertainty has returned.
The government expanded vaccine access to a wider population by lowering the eligibility age threshold from 30 to 16 years and was mulling a further relaxation of social-distancing rules, but the confirmation of the city’s first local case with the N501Y mutant strain over the weekend has raised a warning flag.
It could put the government’s travel bubble plan with Singapore, to be relaunched in mid-May after being suspended last November, up in the air again.
Agricultural, Fisheries and Conservation Department officers take away a cat from a Jordan building where the first person to test positive in the community for a mutant coronavirus strain had stayed. Photo: May Tse
Agricultural, Fisheries and Conservation Department officers take away a cat from a Jordan building where the first person to test positive in the community for a mutant coronavirus strain had stayed. Photo: May Tse

And a bigger issue is the likelihood of further delays to plans for resuming normal exchanges between Hong Kong and mainland China – the border shutdown since last March has profoundly affected economic activity and travel between the two sides. 

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To be fair, Hong Kong can confidently claim to be a low-risk destination compared with the likes of the United States and some other countries in Europe and Asia. But ironically, it remains on the mainland’s list of high-risk places since the city has yet to reach a state of “zero” local infections, the key precondition set by the mainland before quarantine-free, cross-boundary activities can resume.

The stringent requirement puts the Hong Kong government in a difficult position, too – and the change of tone from Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor is telling enough.

The city so far has failed to convince the mainland side to consider reciprocal, quarantine-free travel if local infections can be brought down to a “very low” level. Lam, who once tried to seek help from Beijing, has now made it clear that she will not push for a border reopening by ignoring mainland people’s feelings.

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