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Hong Kong Virus Cases Surge Again as City Sees ‘Fourth Wave’

Hong Kong will impose new social restrictions and ask more students to stay home as local cases jump.

Hong Kong Virus Cases Surge Again as City Sees ‘Fourth Wave’
A protective face mask on the ground in Stockholm, Sweden. (Photographer: Mikael Sjoberg/Bloomberg)

Hong Kong will impose new social restrictions and ask more students to stay home as local cases jump by the most in about three months, signaling the arrival of a new wave and threatening a high-profile travel air bubble with Singapore before its launch on Sunday.

The city reported 26 new infections on Friday, of which 21 are local. Nine of the local cases can’t be traced. The government has also detected over 40 preliminary cases awaiting confirmation, a sign that Friday’s jump is not an anomaly. The surge comes as other parts of Asia, including Japan and South Korea, see alarming flareups as colder weather sets in.

Late Friday, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore said it’s working closely with the country’s Health Ministry to “gather the facts,” with an update that could come just the day before the scheduled flights. “The Singapore and Hong Kong governments are in close contact on the situation,” the airport authority said, responding to public queries on whether the travel bubble will still proceed.

In Hong Kong, classes for primary school levels 1 to 3 will be suspended from Nov. 23 for two weeks. Kindergartens and nurseries have been suspended since a week ago due to outbreaks of upper respiratory tract infection and the risks of coronavirus resurgence. No students or school staff have tested positive for Covid-19 yet, said officials.

Hong Kong Virus Cases Surge Again as City Sees ‘Fourth Wave’

“Hong Kong’s epidemic has shown rapid deterioration and experts have said the fourth wave is inevitable,” Secretary for Food and Health Sophia Chan said in a briefing Friday. “We have done a series of measures to strengthen control, but we still see the situation turning bad.”

The turn for the worse comes two days before the former British colony is due to launch an air travel bubble with fellow financial hub Singapore, in what is the world’s first quarantine-free travel arrangement open to all residents. Seen as a template for how to restart global travel, the bubble’s growing precariousness could now make it a cautionary tale about the futility of such efforts while the coronavirus remains rampant and volatile.

The bubble would be suspended for two weeks once the seven-day moving average of local, untraceable cases in either city rises above five. Over the past seven days, Hong Kong has recorded 15 untraceable local cases, inching closer toward the red line of 35. Travelers may now face the prospect of the bubble being suspended.

The city will now make mass testing mandatory among certain groups, though officials did not specify which. It is also mulling measures like tightening the numbers allowed to gather at local hotels during “staycation” trips. Chan urged all residents to stop “unnecessary” gatherings and wear masks at all times.

The government is hoping that the flareup can be contained before reaching the level of the outbreak that started in early July, Hong Kong’s worst-ever. Then, restrictions like a ban on public gatherings of more than two people and the closure of restaurants between 6 p.m. and 5 a.m. dealt a significant blow to the financial center’s economy.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.