Shades Off | For those dreaming of international travel, Hong Kong now has little to offer
- Those drawn to Hong Kong by the lure of easy travel now find themselves at a crossroads. When government policy is guided neither by scientific nor economic sense, it is impossible to know when pre-Covid mobility will return. Is it time to seek more travel-friendly places?
Hong Kong is surely one of the best-positioned places on Earth for someone with travel lust to live. In less than a day, almost any part of the world can be reached by air, often without requiring a stopover. For someone on the verge of retiring and with plans to spent weeks and months getting to know cities of dreams in depth, it is an ideal base.
Yet here I am, wondering if I should stay or go, trying to work out if restrictions the government claims are about keeping the Covid-19 pandemic out are here to stay or will be tossed aside when a great enlightenment strikes.
How many people in Hong Kong have had the disease isn’t known. Officially, it’s nearly 1.2 million, but with rapid antigen testing now an accepted way to determine, authorities aren’t privy to what’s really happening. We all know of people who self-tested positive and out of worry for the consequences, kept it to themselves, their family and friends, and stayed at home until negative.
It can’t be denied that Covid-19 is constantly mutating and one of the variants could become even deadlier than Delta or of greater transmissibility than Omicron. But to think in these terms when people’s lives and livelihoods and in my selfish case, future, are involved is akin to refusing to get into a vehicle for fear of having an accident.