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Coronavirus: Hong Kong may need to adopt Macau’s suspension mechanism for quarantine-free travel with mainland China, government adviser says

  • Professor David Hui suggests city look into Macau’s system with mainland, where quarantine-free travel is stopped if one infection is found in community
  • Others say city can adopt relaxed system given higher flow of international visitors and suspend travel only where there are signs of community transmission

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A traveller at the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge. Discussions on how to resume quarantine-free travel have increased in recent weeks. Photo: Sam Tsang
Hong Kong may need to follow in Macau’s footsteps and set up a suspension mechanism for quarantine-free travel with mainland China when the border fully reopens, a government pandemic adviser has said, meaning just one local Covid-19 case could trigger the measure.
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But some other health experts said Hong Kong could adopt a more relaxed rule given its higher flow of international travellers, and suspend quarantine-free arrangements only when there were signs of community transmission.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor on Sunday said Hong Kong and the mainland authorities would need to agree during talks on fully reopening the border on specific circumstances that would trigger a suspension.

Discussions on how to resume quarantine-free travel have increased in recent weeks, with officials and experts from the mainland and Hong Kong meeting in Shenzhen late last month.

04:47

Hong Kong should follow Singapore’s lead and drop ‘zero case’ approach to Covid-19

Hong Kong should follow Singapore’s lead and drop ‘zero case’ approach to Covid-19

Hong Kong authorities confirmed seven more Covid-19 cases, all imported, on Monday. They included a foreign domestic helper from the Philippines and a seafarer from Montenegro, bringing the tally of infections to 12,268, with 213 related deaths.

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