Hong Kong Orders Compulsory Covid Tests For All Its Citizens
Listen to this article
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
Hong Kong’s government has ordered the compulsory testing of all of its 7.5 million citizens as the city battles surging coronavirus infections.
Chief Executive Carrie Lam said residents would have to undergo three rounds of tests starting in mid-March.
Schools will break early for summer.
The territory is trying to adhere to China’s “zero Covid” policy, but the highly contagious Omicron variant has overwhelmed its hospitals and testing and quarantine facilities.
Do you want the best Odds? Click Here
While other parts of the world are learning to live with the disease, China’s policy is to try to eradicate infection through early testing, detailed contact tracing and strict quarantine and travel restrictions.
“The coming one to three months are crucial in fighting the pandemic,” Mrs Lam told reporters. “This quickly worsening epidemic has far exceeded the Hong Kong government’s ability to tackle it.”
All residents will have to undergo three rounds of PCR testing, at intervals of about a week. Ms Lam did not set a date for testing to start but said capacity would be increased to a million daily tests.
“Since we have a population of some seven million people, testing will take about seven days.”
In between compulsory tests, residents will be required to conduct daily rapid antigen testing. Experts have warned that huge numbers of the population could be in isolation within weeks.
Entire cities have been locked down in China, but such a move was not being considered in Hong Kong because it was “not realistic”, Mrs Lam said.
It’s the first time everyone in the special administrative region will have been tested – a policy enacted elsewhere in China.
The former British colony reported 6,211 new cases on Tuesday, but the actual figure is thought to be much higher because of a backlog in testing.
Hong Kong, which had been hailed for its pandemic control over the past two years, has seen an exponential rise in infections since Omicron laid bare its defences.
In the first two years of the pandemic the territory recorded only 12,650 cases and just over 200 deaths, numbers far below most other similar-sized cities. The total number of cases has multiplied five-fold since January.
By: BBC