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More OFWs stranded in both Manila and HK as travel ban bites

Posted on 04 February 2020 No comments
By The SUN
With nearly all flights to Manila from HK cancelled, Ann and her friend are thinking of flying to Taiwan first

Anna Jean Zamora, a domestic helper in Hong Kong for just three months, struggled with her large luggage and a heavy backpack as she phoned a friend on Feb 3 on the sidewalk of World-Wide Plaza in Central.   


She said she had just been terminated by her employer and was waiting for her friend to escort her to the employment agency in Kowloon so she could pick up her air ticket and fly home to Iloilo as soon as possible.

She said she’d already received her one month’s wage in lieu of notice but was clueless as to when she could fly back to the Philippines because of a travel ban to and from Hong Kong that the Manila government had imposed the day before.

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Zamora was meeting another helper with the same dilemma. In her case, her employers had allowed her to go home while they were overseas.

At least three other helpers had gone to Philippine Overseas Labor Office on the same day to seek help because their flights to Manila were cancelled.

It was a story told several times during the day, as the travel ban imposed by President Rodrigo Duterte for all inbound and outbound flights between Manila and Hong Kong, Macau and China, went on its second day.
POLO officer-in-charge Antonio Villafuerte said his office was kept busy the whole day by employment agencies, employers and workers all asking how to respond to the ban.

Not a few were worried because their visas were expiring, but they didn’t know when they could head home, or where to stay in Hong Kong while they waited out the ban.

Over in the Philippines, hundreds of Filipino overseas workers were left wringing their hands at several international airports because they, too, could not fly to Hong Kong because of the ban.


Anxious OFWs hoping against hope they could still board their flight to HK

Villafuerte said that those in Hong Kong whose visas are expiring should go to the Immigration Department to ask for an extension, which he said would most likely be given as Hong Kong was aware of the travel ban.

“If they still encounter problems then they could come and see us in Polo,” Villafuerte said.



He advised those who do not have accommodation to seek temporary shelter with their employment agencies. Otherwise, they could stay in low-cost boarding houses, or shelters run by NGOs like the Mission for Migrant Workers or the Catholic Centre.

For the workers stranded in the Philippines due to the ban, Villafuerte said they should explain the situation to their employers to avert dismissal.

“Paliwanagan nila ang mga amo nila kung ano ang nangyayari. Kung may malawak silang pag-iisip, tatanggapin kayo,” Villafuerte said.

He acknowledged that the biggest potential problem could be terminations, especially those who are badly needed in Hong Kong by their employers.

One of the stranded workers had this in mind when she sent a message online to appeal for help.

“Bakasyon po ako dito sa Pinas. Ang flight ko pabalik sa Hong Kong ay na-cancel… Paano po pag i-terminate ng amo, may makukuha pa po ba ako sa employer ko? May 7 days pa ako na sahod na naiwan sa kanila,” Joan Tolentino said in her message.

Villafuerte said that if a termination does occur, all Polo could do is to help the worker go after the employer for the compensation due her under the employment contract.

But if there is a chance that the employer could be convinced to change his or her mind, Polo could try to intercede on the worker’s behalf.
 
Villafuerte says Polo will extend help to OFWs who might be fired for failing to return to work as scheduled
At least one positive news came the way of the stranded passengers in Manila, when Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III said they’d get each P10,000 financial assistance from the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration. Those stuck at the airport will also be housed at OWWA’s halfway-home.

OWWA Welfare Officer Marivic Clarin said the guidelines for the distribution of the Php10,000 was still being finalized. “It’s for workers who are on vacation in the Philippines and have confirmed flights back to Hong Kong. We had a similar assistance (program) before.”

Unfortunately for those who are in Hong Kong and have been bumped off their flights to the Philippines, the financial aid won’t be made available to them. Clarin said it’s because they can still fly out to the Philippines, and allowed entry.

President Duterte imposed the ban after a Chinese man from Wuhan died of coronavirus infection in Manila, making him the first casualty of the deadly disease outside China.

The government moved to stop the contagion by banning all non-Filipinos who had been to China, Hong Kong and Macau from entering the country. Filipinos would be allowed in, but they will have to undergo self-quarantine for 14 days.

On flights back to the three destinations, however, only foreigners are allowed to book seats, Filipinos can’t, even if Hong Kong and Macau, or even China, will not bar their entry.
 
PAL canceled all its flights to China, HK and Macau until Feb 29
There was immediate chaos after the ban was announced, with Filipinos, including those permanently residing in Hong Kong, scrambling to find ways to get past immigration scrutiny in Manila.

Not a few booked flights to Thailand and Singapore and other nearby destinations, but secretly made onward flights to Hong Kong, in a bid to get around the prohibition.

Travel industry insiders say a number of Filipino professionals successfully got out using this trick, but Manila Immigration caught on by noon on seeing an unusually large number of departures to Bangkok and Singapore, and immediately clamped down on the practice.

One of those in the know said the dead giveaway for immigration officers was if the traveler is, or used to be, an overseas Filipino worker in Hong Kong.

At least one foreign domestic worker who tried to pull off the same trick was offloaded at Ninoy Aquino International Airport despite showing an invitation letter from a supposed host in Singapore. In truth, her Hong Kong employer was just determined to fly her back to the city after her vacation so she could resume taking care of her young ward.

Another desperate employer also tried to get his Filipina domestic worker to fly to Bangkok, then on to Hong Kong, but on being shown a message from Polo advising against this move, he relented.
 
Quarantine card issued to all Filipinos who arrive in Manila from the affected routes
Polo’s advisory read, “Do not attempt to fool Manila Immigration by going to another country en route to Hong Kong. Immigration officers there have banned HK OFWs leaving for whatever reason, and in at least one case, traumatized one who tried to go to Singapore.”

Those due to fly out of Hong Kong are similarly trapped. While the ban says they will be allowed entry in the Philippines, all three major airlines flying to Manila had cancelled all their flights, inbound and outbound, until Feb 29.

Only Hong Kong Airlines was still flying its sole direct flight to Manila, but with prices as high as $7,300, one way. The cheapest ticket on the route still comes out to $3,000 one way, which is just a third of what the budget airline used to charge.

The challenge of getting home despite the ban does not faze Zamora and her friend. They are now talking of flying to Taiwan, then on to Manila from there.

The two could be quarantined when they get to Manila once immigration sees them as having come from Hong Kong, but that’s the easier part of the problem. The bigger part is, will Zamora’s friend still be able to fly back to Hong Kong?

Only the lifting of the ban could guarantee that.
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Chaos as Phl imposes travel ban on China, HK and Macau

Posted on 03 February 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Cathay Pacific staff at NAIA Terminal 3 tell Filipino passengers that they aren't allowed their HK flight  

Hundreds of travelers, many of them Filipino migrant workers, were left stranded in airports in the Philippines and Hong Kong, after the Manila government imposed a travel ban today, Feb. 2, for people coming in - and out - of China, Hong Kong and Macau.

The ban, first announced on a radio show by Senator Bong Go, came as government health officials disclosed that a second patient in the Philippines, a 44-year-old man from Wuhan, had tested positive for the novel coronavirus, and died.

The victim was the first to die of the Wuhan coronavirus outside of China. He was the companion of the 38-year-old woman who was the first confirmed coronavirus case in the Philippines.

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The travel ban carried a mysterious prohibition against Filipinos leaving the country for China and its two administrative regions, resulting in many overseas Filipino workers bound for Hong Kong being held up at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila.

Officer-in-charge of the Philippine Overseas Labor Office Antonio Villafuerte said he had been receiving anxious calls from employment agencies whose recruits had failed to board their flights.

“But I am as surprised as they are,” said Villafuerte. “We didn’t get any advisory from the head office about the travel ban so maybe they were also not told in advance.”

All that his office could do for now, he said, was to advise the agencies and the workers to check with the airlines if their flights would go ahead as scheduled, or postponed. Those on the way home could probably postpone their vacation as they won’t be allowed to return to HK under the travel ban. 

Polo is also awaiting word from the Department of Labour and Employment on when the ban might be lifted so Hong Kong-bound workers could begin to leave again.
 
Congen Tejada (left) and OIC Villafuerte say they are working on getting the OFWs back to their HK workplace
Consul General Raly Tejada has also expressed concern about the OFWs stranded in various airports in the Philippines.

“I am terribly sorry for what they are going through,” he said, then added that the Consulate is appealing to the government to reverse the ban on the OFWs leaving for Hong Kong. “I am praying hard,” he said.
Also among the stranded today were a few Filipino residents who were supposed to return to Hong Kong after a vacation or work trips.

Among them was a Filipina who was held up at the airport, but her foreigner-husband was allowed to leave.

Pam Smith said, “I didn’t even make it past immigration.” Her husband reportedly tried to ask for humanitarian consideration on her behalf, but “they said he can stay with me instead,” he said.

Apart from preventing Filipinos to leave the country for China, Hong Kong and Macau, the ban also applies to any person, regardless of nationality, who flies in directly from the three places, or had visited them 14 days before traveling to the Philippines.

Filipino citizens are allowed to come in but they will be put under self-quarantine for 14 days on arrival in the Philippines.

The ban appeared to have been anticipated by flag carrier Philippine Airlines, as all its flights to and from Manila were cancelled on Feb 1 and 2. Later it issued an advisory that all flights to the affected destinations won’t resume until Feb 29.

Cebu Pacific followed suit, announcing later in the day that it was cancelling all its flights between Manila and Hong Kong and Macau from Feb 2 to Feb 29. Flights to China will remain suspended until Mar. 29.

Filipinos appeal to Cebu Pacific crew to allow them to board their flight to HK
According to Manila airport authorities who held a news conference on the presidential directive, those who will be put on self-quarantine will be visited regularly by doctors and epidemiologists who will monitor their condition.

And while Filipinos will not be allowed to travel to China and its two administrative regions, foreigners will be able to, which raises another question as to the logic – or the real reason - behind the ban. Hong Kong and Macau, and even China, have not barred Filipinos entering their territories, so the Philippines banning its own nationals from traveling to these places raises a big question.

A Filipino living in Hong Kong with ties to a Philippine Airlines supervisor claims the government has been using the planes of the flag carrier to fly Chinese nationals to the city of Guiyang, from where they could apparently return home to locked down Hubei province, or be quarantined.

A check of the website of Philippine Airlines showed all its flights from Hong Kong to Manila and back, from Feb 1 (when the ban was not even in force)  to Feb 5 had either been “sold out” or “not offered.” The same signs show up for flights from Manila to Hong Kong until Feb 6-8.

Last week, President Rodrigo Duterte announced that some 500 Wuhan residents who were in the Philippines would be flown back to their hometown, amid an outcry from Filipinos about the possibility of them bringing the coronavirus to the country.

Only Cathay Pacific Airlines appeared oblivious to the planned ban. Its flight to Cebu City earlier today, CX921, landed as scheduled at about 11:30am at Mactan International Airport and was immediately put in a lockdown.



Government officials reportedly surrounded the aircraft and allowed only Philippine passport holders to alight. About 100 non-Filipinos were held inside the plane for about five hours before they were allowed to fly back to Hong Kong.

The Filipino passengers became the first group to be put under quarantine in line with the travel ban that was put in place only hours earlier.

On the flipside were the Filipinos who were prevented from leaving the country as a result of the ban, many of whom were foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong.

One, who gave her name as Jackielyn, said her connecting flight from her hometown in Isabela left as scheduled, so she was surprised on being told at Manila international airport that she couldn’t proceed to Hong Kong as her Cebu Pacific flight had been cancelled.

“Kasi wala namang pasabi pero pagdating dito biglang canceled ang flight,” she said.

Jackielyn said she would spend the night at the airport, hoping to be allowed to leave for Hong Kong tomorrow, even if the airline couldn’t tell her when the ban on travel to her workplace would be lifted. She said she had loans to pay and was worried about the interest payments that would surely be levied on her if she failed to make her monthly payment on time.
 
Galla gets a certificate from PAL which she hopes will help her keep her job
Another vacationing OFW, Marivic A. Galla, traveled all the way from Laguna to the Manila airport for her 2pm flight but was told on arrival that the plane would leave at 7pm instead. But at 6pm she was told it had been canceled.

One of her friends said Galla was crying on the phone, thinking of her badly-needed salary that she was looking forward to getting on Feb 9. She also couldn’t contact her employers to tell them about the travel ban as they were all supposed to arrive in Hong Kong at about the same time after a week-long vacation.

Galla was worried, too, about losing her job as both her employers work and need someone to stay at home to look after their child.

Another OFW, Hylien Calado, was supposed to fly back to Hong Kong on Feb 3 but Cebu Pacific sent notice that her flight had been canceled so her employer checked online for another flight.
 
Calado traveled from Baguio to Manila only to be told that she was banned from boarding her CX flight
She said their websites showed that both PAL and Cebu Pacific had canceled all their flights to Manila starting Feb 1 so her employer booked a Cathay Pacific ticket for her for Feb 2.

“Confirmed naman pero pagpunta ko dito di daw kami pwede umalis kasi kasasabi lang kanina yung ban,” she said in a message.

At Manila airport, she said all Philippine passport holders were told they could not fly out to China, Hong Kong and Macau.

“Uuwi na lang po ako ulit, naiintindihan ni amo,” she said.

But going back home for Calado is not that easy, as she lives far away in Baguio City, about 450 km north of Manila, a travel of at least four and a half hours.

Two other countries today joined the growing list of those that imposed travel restrictions to and from mainland China, Indonesia and Australia. But both only banned inbound and outbound travels to the mainland, and did not include Hong Kong or Macau. 

The only other countries that have extended the restriction to Hong Kong apart from the Philippines are North Korea, Italy and Kuwait. Vietnam added Hong Kong to its China ban originally, but subsequently limited it to only the mainland.

Meanwhile, in China, the death toll from the rapidly spreading Wuhan coronavirus has risen to 304 as of today with 45 new deaths being reported within a 24-hour-period. There were 2,590 more confirmed cases, bringing the total to nearly 14,500.

The number of confirmed infections from the coronavirus is now far higher than those recorded from Sars, or severe acute respiratory syndrome which killed 774 worldwide between 2002-2003. The epicenter of the contagion then was Hong Kong, where 299 people died.
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Stricter rules on hospital visits hinder sick OFW's wish to return home

Posted on 02 February 2020 No comments
Emelita Llamo Vidal during better times.

By Vir B. Lumicao

A 58-year-old Filipina who is in intensive care in Tuen Mun Hospital after suffering a stroke is asking help from the government so she could be repatriated as soon as possible as she wants to be treated in a hospital back home.

But Overseas Workers Welfare Administration staff could not visit her reportedly because of a ban on hospital visits due to the Wuhan novel coronavirus contagion.  

Emelita Llamo Vidal, a native of Roxas, Capiz, was taken by her employer to the hospital on Jan 29 after she collapsed at the latter’s home in Yuen Long before noon.


She was the second Filipina domestic worker in Hong Kong reported to have suffered a stroke on the same day. The other worker, Lovella F. Albero, is now being treated in the emergency room of Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital in Chai Wan.

Vidal, who has been working in Hong Kong for the past 22 years, sought the help of friends to inform OWWA about her plight as well as her wish to go home.

Her situation was relayed to Philippine Overseas Labor Office officer-in-charge, Antonio Villafuerte, who notified OWWA welfare officers.
Villafuerte said on Sunday, however, that WelOf Virsie B. Tamayao could not see the patient because of the visiting ban.

In an advisory on Jan 26, the Hospital Authority said:

“In accordance with Hong Kong government’s Preparedness Plan, the Hospital Authority has implemented measures of the Emergency Response Level. Visiting arrangement is suspended, while compassionate arrangement will be made for clinical consideration.

“Visiting hours will be changed subject to HA Response Level for Infection Control. Please contact Enquiry Office on 2683 8888 for details.”



Villafuerte said that even if OWWA does get to see her, the patient’s wish to be repatriated soon may not be possible unless her hospital doctors certify her as fit to fly.
 
Vidal is reportedly conscious and has managed to chat with a niece and her daughter, who arrived two weeks ago to work with her in the same household.

Her niece reportedly tried to see her once to try and deliver a charger because Vidal’s mobile phone was running low on battery, but hospital nurses refused her entry because of the visiting ban.

Vidal has three other children and was reportedly taking care of an elderly woman.
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Ang kapalaran mo sa Pebrero

Posted on No comments

DAGA. Isinilang noong 1924/36/48/60/72/84/96/08
Maayos ang takbo ng trabaho kung babawasan mo ang daldal. Hindi ka mapakali dahil gusto mong masunod ang gusto mo, pero ayaw mong masira ang magandang samahan. Hindi mo kailangang magtaas ng boses para makuha ang nararapat na atensyon para sa iyo; tandaan na mas mabisa ang pakikipag-usap ng malumanay. Lucky numbers: 9, 13, 20 at 41.

BAKA. Isinilang noong 1925/37/49/61/73/85/97/09
Gagamitin mo ang iyong intuisyon imbes ang makatwirang paraan, at magbubukas ito ng bagong oportunidad para sa iyo. Madali kang magalit ngayon; piliting kontrolin ang emosyon upang hindi masira ang relasyon sa mga malalapit sa iyo. Kung matitino ang iyong mga kaibigan, bakit hindi ka sumama sa kanila? Ito ang magpapabago sa iyong mga ideya. Mas magiging ganado kang magtrabaho ngayon. Lucky numbers: 12, 34, 36 at 42.

TIGRE Isinilang noong 1926/38/50/62/74/86 at 98/10
Masigla at mataas ang tiwala mo sa sarili ngayon, na siyang magpapaganda sa lahat ng aspeto sa buhay mo. Hihingan ka ng payo ng mga malalapit sa iyo at malaki ang maitutulong mo, pero maging maingat sa pananalita. Nagiging kumplikado ang lagay ng relasyon kaya minsan ay hindi mo maiwasang magsinungaling, pero kapag nasanay ka rito, mas lalong bibigat ang sitwasyon. Lucky numbers: 17, 25, 31 at 44.

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KUNEHO Isinilang noong 1927/39/51/63/75/87/99
Alam mong itaas ang sarili upang anihin ang magandang bunga ng pinaghirapan. Ang anumang alinlangan ay maaalis kaya hindi ka na mahihirapang timbangin ang lahat. Magiging abala ang tahanan; kaanak na aalis, paglilipat o pagpapaayos ng bahay o pagi-istima ng mga bisita. May makakatagpo kang tao na makakapagpabago sa iyong plano. Lucky numbers: 7, 21, 40 at 45.

 DRAGON Isinilang noong 1928/40/52/64/76/88/00
Mababawi mo ang kumpiyansa sa sarili at tapang ng loob. May mga taong magrereklamo tungkol dito pero wala kang pakialam. Ang gawaing iniatang sa iyo ay unti-unti nang nagbubunga ng maganda. Marami kang problemang dapat ayusin sa pananalapi, pero hindi ka gaanong mababahala. Sa trabaho, huwag umiwas makipag-diskusyon dahil mahalaga ito upang mapabuti at mapadali ang trabaho. Lucky numbers: 2, 19, 33 at 40.



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AHAS Isinilang noong 1929/41/53/65/77/89/01
May mga pagbabaho sa pamilya o sa trabaho na hindi pwedeng iwasan o balewalain. Sumangguni sa mga mas nakakaalam at sundin ang kanilang payo. Makakaramdam ka na panibagong sigla. Kung nagmamaneho, iwasan ang pagpapatakbo ng matulin. Sa trabaho, kailangan mong manindingan at magkaroon ng sapat na motibasyon upang masunod ang gusto mong mangyari. Lucky numbers: 7, 22, 30 at 39.

KABAYO. Isinilang noong 1930/42/54/66/78/90/02
Puno ka ng emosyon sa ngayon, pero walang makapagsasabi kung magiging masaya ang love affair mo o kung ang mga katangiang hinahanap mo ay nasa taong napupusuan mo. Kung maayos ang sistema mo sa trabaho, mas magiging madali at organisado ito at iba pang dapat gawin. Piliting masolusyunan agad ang malilit na problema sa samahan. Maging maingat sa mga iniinom na gamot na pampapayat. Lucky numbers: 9, 14, 26 at 37.

KAMBING. Isinilang noong 1919/31/43/55/67/79/91/03
Para kang binagsakan ng langit at lupa sa dami at sabay-sabay na problemang dumarating. Mapapaaway ka sa katrabaho at magulo rin ang pamilya. Kumplikado rin ang lagay ng relasyon pero parang wala kang ginagawang paraan na ayusin ito kaya kanya-kanya muna kayo at walang kibuan. Bigyan ng atensyon ang pag-aaral ng mga anak. Lucky numbers: 21, 23, 35 at 43.



UNGGOY. Isinilang noong 1920/32/44/56/68/80/92/04
Kung single, subukan mong maglalabas upang makakilala ng mga bagong kaibigan. Pero magiging maswerte kang makikilala ang taong nakalaan sa iyo at makasama sa habang buhay, kahit hindi mo ito hanapin. Sa may asawa, may mga argumentong magaganap. Mag-ingat sa mga taong m TANDANG. Isinilang noong 1921/33/45/57/69/81/93/05
atatamis ang dila na bebentahan ka ng mamahaling kasangkapan. Siguraduhing may garantiya kang pwede itong isoli kung hindi magustuhan. Lucky numbers: 7, 10, 18 at 28.

TANDANG. Isinilang noong 1921/33/45/57/69/81/93/05
Posibleng magkaroon ng problema sa pag-ihi at mga pananakit ng katawan. Piliting mag-relax at dagdagan ang pahinga. Kulang ka sa sigla at wala kang ganang magtrabaho; kumilos ka upang malabanan ang lahat na ito at bumalik ang dating tapang. Isipin na ang mga problema ay pagsubok sa buhay na kailangang pagdaanan. Lucky numbers: 16, 33, 45 at 46.

ASO. Isinilang noong 1922/34/46/58/70/82/94/06
Mabibigyan mo ng atensyon ang love life sa kabila ng pagiging abala. Hindi ka mahihirapang mahanap ang taong mamahalin mo, kaya mababago ang iyong pananaw. Mababawasan ang mataas na ambisyon sa personal at material na bagay at makakaisip ka ng mga bagong ideya na magiging kapaki-pakinabang sa lahat. Gaganda rin ang iyong pinansyal na kalagayan. Lucky numbers: 3, 5, 33 at 39.

BABOY. Isinilang noong 1923/35/47/59/71/83/95/07
Gagana ng husto ang iyong imahinasyon upang makagawa ng plano na orihinal at kakaibang bagay na magugustuhan ng lahat. Sa mag-asawa, hindi maiiwasan ang mga pagsususpetsa at away na kung hindi mapag-uusapan, ay lalong lalala. Iwasang maging mapanghusga at bawasan ang pagiging makasarili. Matutukso ka ring gumastos ng husto at maaari kang mabaon sa utang. Lucky numbers: 5, 8, 18 at 27.

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32 million masks on way to HK as panicked search continues

Posted on 31 January 2020 No comments
By The SUN

Mask no more - the mad rush for masks in HK continues, even as the government assures millions are on their way

Millions of surgical masks are said to be on their way to Hong Kong from China as the government works to increase overall supply amid an acute shortage of the basic gear against the fast-spreading novel coronavirus. 

But the announcement of the good news on Jan 30 did not slow down a mad rush for masks, especially after online orders by Hong Kong people were cancelled by overseas suppliers, citing a lack of fresh supply.

As the search for masks intensified, Hong Kong Customs raided a pharmacy in Mong Kok and seized 68,000 masks with suspicious manufacturing dates and arrested a 27-year-old man who was in charge of the store.

Authorities posted photos of the dubious face masks on the government website 
Dispensaries with some stashed masks took advantage of the shortage to make huge profits, with their prices ranging from $180 to $250 for a 50-piece box. At least one dispensary on Hennessy Road in Wanchai priced its 100-piece box at $900 and its kids’ mask at $500 per box.

The long queues at Watson’s Pharmacy outlets disappeared on Friday after the stores put up orange posters saying they had run out of masks as well as alcohol and handrubs.  

News of the impending or ongoing delivery of 32 million masks from China were disclosed after the fourth meeting of the government committee on the crisis  convened by Chief Executive Carrie Lam on Thursday, Jan. 30.
“Having regard to the advice of experts, the Steering Committee cum Command Centre considered that it is necessary to prioritize the supply of surgical masks,” a government spokesman said in a press release on Thursday.

He said priority should be given to healthcare workers and personnel providing care services; people in the public transport, emergency services and immigration services, and other members of the public with practical needs.

The experts encourage other members of the public to go out less frequently and pay attention to personal hygiene so as to minimize the need to use surgical masks, he said.

The pneumonia-like disease that spread from Wuhan City, Hubei Province, has driven up global demand for masks sharply that supply is expected to remain tight in the short term.

Since mid-January, customs officers on both sides of the border have been working on sending to Hong Kong nearly 8 million masks that the Central government had promised. That batch has arrived or will soon arrive, the spokesman said.
 
The Philippine Consulate has requested 100,000 masks from Manila for OFWs
The government is also working on acquiring another batch of more than 24 million masks from China, as it urges retailers to sell them at the usual price upon delivery.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love.
More supply is expected from the Correctional Services Department which is planning to produce them round the clock, increasing its output from 1.1 million to 1.8 million a month.

The only local producer of surgical masks has already doubled its overall output from 800,000 a month to 1.6 million at the government’s request, the spokesman said.

Meanwhile, relevant government departments and the Hospital Authority maintain a certain number of masks as stockpile, but their consumption rate over the past month had increased five to six times the previous rate due to the outbreak.

The spokesman said the Government Logistics Department’s stockpile can meet one to two months’ operational needs of these departments, in particular front-line officers, such as Health, Immigration, Customs and Excise staff, and Fire Services ambulance men.

The Hospital Authority said its stockpile of surgical masks is adequate for about three months’ consumption, although it has diminished recently.

The GLD is sourcing globally and has contacted more than 220 suppliers from over 10 countries. Nearly 5 million masks ordered over the past month have been delivered to Hong Kong since last week.

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