Hong Kong cuts coronavirus hotel quarantine for arrivals to 3 days
HONG KONG — Hong Kong will cut the mandatory hotel quarantine for overseas arrivals from a week to three days, the city’s leader said Monday.
The southern Chinese city remains one of the few places in the world, together with mainland China, to require a quarantine to guard against travelers spreading the coronavirus to the local population. The policy, which takes effect Friday, will be Hong Kong’s shortest quarantine period for arrivals since the pandemic began.
Hong Kong leader John Lee said arriving travelers must stay three days in a designated hotel, then undergo four days of medical surveillance during which their movements will be restricted via the use of a health code system.
Lee said that the new policy of just three days in quarantine was made after scientific evidence and data had been analyzed to control the risk factors.
“We also have to balance the risks against the economic activities and the social lives of [people in] Hong Kong,” Lee said.
The data indicate “that the risk factor of people who have finished three days’ quarantine in a designated hotel ... is actually no more than the risk level of transmission in society,” he said.
Hong Kong actor Kenneth Tsang had tested negative for COVID-19 just before he died Wednesday while isolating in a hotel upon returning from Singapore.
The changes to COVID-19 policies come in spite of an increase in daily infections, which city health officials warn could double to 8,000 in the coming weeks.
During their week of quarantine and surveillance, travelers will also have to test regularly for the coronavirus, and those who are infected must stay in isolation.
Those who test negative can use public transit and enter malls and markets, but they can’t enter bars and amusement parks or visit homes for the elderly, schools and certain medical facilities.
For most of the pandemic, Hong Kong has imposed some of the world’s strictest entry restrictions. At one point, Hong Kong required up to 21 days of compulsory hotel quarantine for travelers and a “circuit breaker” mechanism that would ban flights from certain airlines into the city if they imported too many COVID-19 cases.
Outbreaks in Hong Kong and mainland China are testing the limits of a zero-tolerance COVID-19 policy.
The measures have devastated the city’s tourism industry and disrupted business travel in a city known as an international financial center and a business hub.
Since the pandemic began, hundreds of thousands of residents have left Hong Kong. Many companies have also relocated to countries, such as Singapore, where quarantine-free travel has resumed.
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