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Coronavirus: top government advisers approve measure allowing Hongkongers to gather in groups of 12 from Thursday

  • Top advisers approve move at Tuesday’s Exco meeting, with authorities earlier indicating more social-distancing curbs would also be eased on Thursday
  • City leader separately admits reopening of border with mainland China unlikely to happen soon

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Shoppers in Causeway Bay. Photo: Jonathan Wong

Hongkongers will be allowed to gather in public in groups of 12 on Thursday, up from four, after a top political advisory body approved the measure, 1,000 days after Covid-19 arrived in the city.

But despite the further easing of the city’s coronavirus restrictions, Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu on Tuesday indicated that a full reopening of the border with mainland China or relaxation of Hong Kong’s entry regime were unlikely prospects for the time being.

The reopening of the border with the mainland is seen by proponents as a critical step for Hong Kong to catch up with rivals such as Singapore, after nearly three years of being closed off from the world.

Chief Executive John Lee. Photo: Sam Tsang
Chief Executive John Lee. Photo: Sam Tsang

“I will have to wait for further ideas from our mainland counterparts so that we can really work out the details,” Lee said, revealing his administration was still working with mainland authorities to “iron out some challenges” and areas in which adjustments by the city were needed to ensure its thousands of daily Covid-19 cases would not spill across the border.

Some social-distancing measures in Hong Kong were already set to be lifted from Thursday, after the government last week announced it would allow live performances at entertainment venues, among a raft of other new measures.

However, members of the Executive Council, the city’s key decision-making body, on Tuesday approved an increase for the cap on public gatherings to 12 from the previous four. The limit was last relaxed on April 21 from two to four people, when the fifth coronavirus wave began to subside.

The move came as health officials logged 4,954 coronavirus infections, 388 of which were imported, and seven additional deaths. Hong Kong’s overall tally stands at 1,848,163 cases and 10,285 related fatalities.

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Chris Lau
Chris Lau is a reporter specialising in court and legal affairs in Hong Kong. From criminal justice to constitutional issues, he brings in the latest updates and in-depth analysis on legal issues that affect all aspects of the city. He also covers human rights issues extensively.
Jeffie leads the Hong Kong politics team at the Post. She joined the paper in 2013 after beginning her career as a political reporter in 2009. She is the co-editor of Rebel City: Hong Kong’s Year of Water and Fire published by the Post and World Scientific, which documented the city’s anti-government protests in 2019. She has previously been a recipient of the Human Rights Press Awards, the Hong Kong News Awards and the Chinese University Journalism Award.
Victor Ting is a reporter who covers Hong Kong health and welfare news at the Post.
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