Responsive Ad Slot

Latest

Sponsored

Features

Buhay Pinay

People

Sports

Business Ideas for OFWs

Join us at Facebook!

HK partially shuts border with China starting today

Posted on 30 January 2020 No comments
By The SUN


Lo Wu and Lok Ma Chau gates will be kept open to cross-border travelers

The Hong Kong government has ordered a partial closure of its border with China as part of the effort to contain the spread of the deadly Wuhan coronavirus.

From today, Jan. 30, travelers to China will only be able to use the Lo Wu and Lok Ma Chau border crossings. But they cannot take the East Rail Line from Hung Hom as the station has been closed. 

The West Rail Line from where high-speed trains run between Hong Kong and China has also been closed indefinitely and will be thoroughly sanitized. Nearly all confirmed cases in Hong Kong entered through this route.

Cross-border ferries that originate from China Ferry Terminal in Tsim Sha Tsui and the Tuen Mun Ferry will also stop running until further notice.

The Sha Tau Kok and Man Kam To control points will be closed to private cars and passenger buses, while there will be limited trips for the shuttle coaches and ferries that go to Macau using the Lok Ma Chau and Shenzhen Bay ports, and the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge crossings.


In addition, the four local airlines – Cathay Pacific, Cathay Dragon, Hong Kong Airline and Hong Kong Express – will gradually cut by half their flight schedules between Hong Kong and 24 mainland destinations.


Cathay Dragon is among 4 local airlines that will gradually cut by half their flights to the mainland

In summary, the following 6 border checkpoints will be closed indefinitely: Hung Hom, West Kowloon, Shau Tau Kok, Man Kam To, China Ferry Terminal and Tuen Mun Ferry Terminal.

Limited overland trips and ferry services to Macau will originate from Lok Ma Chau and Shenzhen Bay ports, and the HK-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge crossing.

Only these three crossings will remain open as before: Lo Wu, Lok Ma Chau and Hong Kong International Airport.

All Hong Kong residents still in the mainland are urged to come back and stay at home for at least 14 days as a precaution against the spread of the virus.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam again dismissed calls for a total sealing of the border, saying Hong Kong people made up 75% of all those who left the city up to Jan 27, so it was not meaningful to pursue that option.

“There are a large number of Hong Kong residents who are now travelling in the Mainland and overseas and they need to come back. So, I don’t think it is very meaningful to talk about a complete closure of the boundary control points,” she said.
To further limit the entry of people from the mainland, she said the Central Government had agreed to stop issuing individual visas to Hong Kong, effectively cutting down by half the number of mainland visitors coming in. A further reduction is expected from suspending group tours from the mainland.

The government initiatives to contain the spread of the coronavirus so far include:




 ·   Suspending classes until Feb 17, or two weeks later than was previously announced;
·    Making civil servants work from home, except those providing frontline and emergency services, until Feb 2;
·     Closing all courts and suspending case hearings until Feb 2; 
·     Closing all public parks (including HK Disneyland and Ocean Park), museums, leisure centers, swimming pools and sports facilities until further notice; 
·    Scrapping big events like the annual Hong Kong marathon, scheduled for Feb 5 and 6, and public celebrations of the Lunar New Year; 
·  Suspending all general visiting arrangements, volunteer services and clinical attachment programs at public hospitals 
· Temporarily closing several government offices like the Companies Registry and Official Receivers Office, and suspending public services by the Inland Revenue and Labour Department until Feb 2.

--

I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.



CALL US!
CALL US!

CALL US!



Stores run out of masks, rice, as panic-buying hits HK

Posted on 29 January 2020 No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao

Long lines for face masks as early as 8m - many in the queue went home empty-handed

Long queues for face masks formed outside Hong Kong pharmacies Wednesday morning, Jan 29 as stocks ran out, while panic-buying hit food shops as people hoarded staples amid the Wuhan coronavirus scare gripping the city.

Rice, canned goods and frozen meat had disappeared from many supermarket shelves. In the wet markets, the few stalls and food shops that opened after Lunar New Year had little supply of fresh and frozen meat, seafood, vegetables and fruits.

Masks, on the other hand, are getting scarcer by the day, as most people in Hong Kong have taken to wearing them everywhere, for fear of contamination.
A staff at Watson’s in North Point said they used to sell box of 50 masks for $60, but the supply had already run out. Some smaller pharmacies are reportedly still selling them, but at the highly inflated cost of $200 a box.

The Consulate has responded to the shortage by requesting the Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila to ship a first batch of 100,000 masks to be distributed to Filipino migrant workers.

The masks are expected to arrive this Sunday, Feb. 2, when Consul General Raly Tejada convenes a meeting of Filipino community leaders on how best to respond to the coronavirus crisis.
The coronavirus infection that broke out last December in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, has killed at least 132 of the more than 6,000 confirmed cases on the mainland so far.
The virus has spread to Hong Kong with 10 confirmed cases, forcing Chief Executive Carrie Lam’s government to suspend cross-border high-speed train and ferry services from Thursday, Jan. 30.
Five days earlier, she raised Hong Kong’s response level to the illness to “emergency”, and barred the entry of all people coming in from Hubei, except returning local residents.
 
Long lines at the Consulate after the long Lunar New Year holiday 
The Filcom meeting on Sunday was confirmed by Consul Paulo Saret, head of the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section.

“We will be having a Filcom leaders’ meeting on Sunday to be presided over by the Consul General for us to know what we need to do as a community and what the Hong Kong government is doing for all of us,” Consul Saret said.

He said the meeting would “(assure) our people that the Consulate and the Hong Kong government are doing their best to address the situation.”



Officers of the Consulate and the Philippine Overseas Labor Office met earlier in the day to map out the PCG’s direction for the community in response to Hong Kong’s measures to contain the infection.

Saret said basic measures to protect the community would be announced by Tejada at the Filcom meeting, including the distribution of the highly sought-after masks which will be supplied by the DFA’s Office for Migrant Workers Affairs.

In addition, 10,000 masks will reportedly be sent by the SM Group, which is the Philippine joint-venture partner of AS Watson’s, one of Asia's largest retail groups.

Meanwhile, long queues had formed at street-side stores of Watson’s, Mannings and smaller pharmacies in North Point, Sai Wan Ho and Shau Kei Wan, as early as an hour before the 9am opening time.

One local woman said she was in the queue before 8am at the Java Road Watson’s store. At around 10:30am, a lone female staff said the shop had run out of masks but new supply would arrive at 11am. But none arrived and those who had lined up left disappointed.
 
Rice has disappeared from grocery shelves, forcing people to shift to instant noodles
Panic-buying of food items was reported in several places across Hong Kong. Rice has disappeared from racks at Wellcome on King’sd Road, North Point and as far away as Tai Wai in the New Territories. Many customers opted to stock up on rice noodles and cup noodles instead.

At the Java Road Market across the road from Watson’s, people snapped up the little supply of bean leaves, choi sum, winter cabbage and lettuce that sold for $30 to $40 a catty.
 
Just a few days ago, these puny vegetables would not have attracted a lot of buyers
At Kaibo supermarket nearby, the supply of frozen pork, chicken and beef were dwindling, while its array of fruits had become few and still priced at Lunar New Year levels.

--
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.


CALL US!
CALL US!

CALL US!

Phl to repatriate Filipinos from Wuhan, but they will be quarantined on arrival

Posted on No comments
By The SUN
Hankou railway in Wuhan has been heavily guarded since the lockdown (SCMP photo)
The Philippine government has announced that it is ready to repatriate Filipinos from China's Hubei province, including its capital, Wuhan city, but the returnees will be quarantined for 14 days as part of efforts to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Wuhan, identified as the epicenter of the contagion, has been locked down along with much of Hubei since Jan 23. The coronavirus has afflicted nearly 3,000 people in China alone, and more than 106 have died.

Call us!

A statement issued by the Department of Foreign Affairs on Jan . 28 said the government is arranging for special flights for those who opt to leave Wuhan. They should contact the Philippine Consulate in Shanghai which has jurisdiction over Hubei if they want to get on a flight home.

Upon arrival in Manila the returnees will be taken to a health facility where they will be isolated for 14 days, and their condition monitored constantly.

Those who choose to remain in the area are advised to comply with orders from the local government to help prevent the spread of the new virus further.

Call us now!

The decision to evacuate Filipinos from the afflicted province came in the wake of appeals for help by some of those trapped by the lockdown, mostly through social media.

Two Filipinos who made a video to ask to be rescued said they were afraid for their safety and wellness, as the city has become a virtual ghost town, with many residents either in hospitals or preferring to stay indoors while waiting to ride out the health scare.

Most shops in Wuhan are closed, and roads deserted 

They also feared catching the virus or running out of food should the lockdown remain in force for an extended period.

Reports in Manila say around 300 Filipinos are in Hubei province, and about half are in Wuhan. Actual figures are hard to come by, however, as many of the Filipinos work there illegally, mostly as domestic workers.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque said in a media briefing after meeting with DFA officials on Jan. 27 that the returning Filipinos will all be put in one facility where they will be monitored and checked for any symptoms during the two-week period.

He said the government will bear the cost of the quarantine.



"We will have to spend for that, certainly. As part of the quarantine measure, we will have to sustain them within the 14 days that they are isolated," he said.

Philippine ambassador to China, Jose Santiago Sta. Romana, said the government in Manila has also decided not to issue visas for the meantime to Chinese applicants from Hubei or those who recently traveled to the province.

"Also some Wuhan tourists are currently under observation and isolation due to possible infection, though still to be confirmed by tests," he said.

No Filipino, whether in China or elsewhere, has been confirmed to have the coronavirus.

Below is the public advisory from the DFA on the planned evacuation.

------

DFA to Repatriate Filipinos in Wuhan City, Hubei Province

28 January 2020 —  The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) is ready to repatriate Filipinos in Wuhan City and the rest of Hubei Province who wish to come home, subject to China’s rules on Disease Containment, including immigration clearance and quarantine process, among others.

The DFA is making available special flights from Hubei Province to the Philippines. Hence, Filipinos in the area who wish to be repatriated should contact the Philippine Consulate General in Shanghai:

PHILIPPINE CONSULATE GENERAL, SHANGHAI
Suite 301 Metrobank Plaza
1160 West Yan’An Road, Changning District, Shanghai 200052
Tel. No.: (+86-21) 6281-8020
Fax No.: (+86-21) 6281-8023
Hotline No.: (+86) 1391 747-7112
Email: shanghai.pcg@dfa.gov.ph / shanghaipcg@hotmail.com
Website: www.shanghaipcg.dfa.gov.ph

Upon arrival in the Philippines, Filipino repatriates will be subject to 14 days of mandatory quarantine per guidelines of the Department of Health.

Meanwhile, Filipinos who wish to stay in China should heed advisories from local health authorities, and cooperate with efforts to quell the further spread of 2019-novel Coronavirus.

Foreign Affairs Undersecretary for Strategic Communications and Research Ernesto C. Abella likewise underscores the call of Chinese government that Filipinos in the affected areas needing medical assistance and treatment should go to the nearest medical facility and seek proper medical care, including treatment and quarantine.

During emergency situations, Filipinos in Hubei Province may contact, in addition to the aforementioned Embassy details, any of the two (2) 24-hour Hotlines established by China Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA): +86-27-8712-2256 and +86-27-8781-1173. The said MFA Hotlines can also be contacted should Filipinos need assistance, supplies, and other needs. ***

--
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.


CALL US!
CALL US!

CALL US!

Don't Miss