The outbreak has overwhlemed Hong Kong hospitals, forcing them to place patients outdoors. Photo / Billy H.C. Kwok, The New York Times
A surge in cases has alarmed many residents. But the government's mixed messaging about whether it will impose a lockdown has also been destabilising.
As the government in Hong Kong struggles to contain the city's worst Covid outbreak ever, some residents have panicked. They have emptied supermarket shelves of vegetablesand meat. They have raided drugstores for pain and fever medication. Those who could afford it have jumped on flights out of the city.
Tens of thousands of new omicron cases are being reported each day, and deaths have surged. The anxiety gripping Hong Kong is not just about the explosion of infections, but also about what the government will do next. Mixed messages from officials have left residents wondering: Will there be a lockdown? Will we be sent into isolation facilities? Will our children be taken from us if they test positive?
Under pressure from Beijing to eliminate infections, Hong Kong officials have vowed to test all 7.4 million residents. Such an operation would require restricting people's movements, but the government has been ambiguous about whether it would impose a lockdown, and if so, when. Just the possibility of one, however, set off the run on groceries and other supplies.
"I've been here most of my life, through everything, and it's never come to something like the panic I've seen by the public," said Allan Zeman, 72, a property developer and an adviser to Hong Kong's leader, Carrie Lam.
The city's fatality rate from the virus is currently among the world's highest, at three per 100,000 residents, largely because many older Hong Kongers are unvaccinated. (Since the pandemic started, though, Covid has killed Americans at far higher rates than people in other wealthy nations, as well as in Hong Kong.)
Hong Kong is one of the last places in the world that is still trying to eradicate the coronavirus, rather than live with it. It has doubled down on a strategy of isolating every case found, regardless of severity and symptoms, and imposing quarantine orders on people deemed close contacts, despite a shortage of facilities and workers. Rising infections, as well as the government's measures, have already overwhelmed hospitals, morgues, ambulance services and quarantine facilities, and forced understaffed post offices, banks and even prisons to cut back on services.
Residents have been particularly alarmed by the government's approach to children who test positive for the coronavirus. The city erupted in an outcry two weeks ago after health workers took an infected 11-month-old girl from her parents and isolated her in a hospital. One parent is typically allowed to accompany a child, but the hospitals are too crowded, with hundreds of children stuck in Covid isolation wards. Officials later said they would organise video chats to allow hospitalised children to stay in touch with their family members.
Kaylah Tong, a 35-year-old pastor, said that she sent her 2-year-old son to a hospital last month after he had tested positive, with a high fever and convulsions. He stayed alone in an isolation ward for two days.
A doctor had initially warned her that her son could be kept in isolation for weeks because of the hospital's Covid-19 protocols, which include requiring patients to test negative before being discharged. That made Tong worry about her son's mental health.
"How could children be kept there so long without the parents at their side, just because of quarantine measures? I cannot accept that," she said.
By the third day, though, the hospital let Tong take her son home to recover; his condition had improved and his hospital bed was needed. The government later said it would temporarily loosen its policy so that only children with severe coronavirus symptoms would need to be hospitalised.
Foreign governments have also responded to Hong Kong's pandemic measures with concern. Citing the risk of familial separation, the US Consulate last week warned Americans not to travel to Hong Kong. The French consul general acknowledged that the latest measures would "profoundly affect everyone's life, with a price to pay that has been steadily increasing for two years, especially for families with children."
Consular officials have worked to help expatriates find travel arrangements to leave Hong Kong, which has banned flights from nine countries, including the United States, Canada, Britain and Australia. The Swiss Consulate arranged one flight for citizens. The Irish Consulate said it had "never experienced this level of demand for consular service for those wishing to leave."
Hong Kong, a place once known as "Asia's World City," now has some of the strictest travel restrictions, isolating it from the rest of the world. The new uncertainty has driven the largest exodus of residents since the early days of the pandemic in 2020, with more than 70,000 net departures last month, according to data from the Immigration Department.
Weeks earlier, Cordula Kotanko, a German management consultant, and her husband had been thinking about leaving Hong Kong because their three daughters had been struggling with remote learning during much of the pandemic. They were also worried about the prospect of being caught in a citywide lockdown.
Then, late last month, the government said it would bring forward the summer holiday to start in March and April, around four months earlier than usual. Officials said they planned to use schools to conduct mass testing and isolation of the sick. That prompted Kotanko and her husband to pack their family up and fly to Singapore.
"At that point, we just wanted to get out of Hong Kong in order to act so that we could make decisions and not have decisions made for us," Kotanko said. "What we experienced in the past two years is that children always come last in Hong Kong and the kids have had to shoulder a lot of the pandemic."
The outbreak and the government's policies have been especially hard on the city's working class. Many service workers have lost their jobs as thousands of businesses went bankrupt. Families who live in tiny apartments have been forced to choose between staying home and infecting relatives or sleeping elsewhere.
The state of grocery stores and pharmacies may be the starkest illustration of how this international hub is buckling under this omicron surge.
Mannings, one of Hong Kong's best-known drugstore chains, has had to temporarily close dozens of its stores. Various pain medications and Covid testing kits, according to its website, are out of stock. Some other drugstores in the city are out of sanitary napkins and tampons.
ParknShop, a supermarket chain, has limited individual purchases of canned food, toilet paper and medicine. At Wellcome, another supermarket chain, employees put little notes on shelves asking patrons not to hoard vegetables, meat and eggs.
Last Tuesday, Betty Xiao, a graduate student, rushed to the biggest supermarket in Tai Po, a neighbourhood in northern Hong Kong where she lives, after her roommate told her that the government might announce a lockdown. Xiao wanted to stock up on food in case online deliveries of groceries were disrupted.
As she neared the store, she could see a line of customers that snaked around the street. Inside, she said, she and other people were snatching up items straight from cardboard boxes that employees had not even unloaded onto the shelves. Xiao said she was able to grab the last bag of bread.
"It was a pretty tense atmosphere," Xiao said. "I had to be fast."