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Thousands of people go outdoors as HK’s new Covid-19 cases drop to 4

Posted on 13 April 2020 No comments
By The SUN

People kept to the 4-to-a-group rule, but still sat close to each other on this small grassy patch on the Peak

Hong Kong people flocked to various popular gathering spots on Easter Sunday, as health authorities reported only four new cases of Covid-19, bringing the city’s total tally to 104.

Three of the new cases involve people who had flown in from abroad: one who visited the United States, while the two others are students: one in the United Kingdom, and the other, in Canada.
The last case is linked to another patient who had tested positive earlier.

It was the lowest daily increase since Mar 14, when four new cases were also reported, and the fourth consecutive day when fewer than 20 cases were reported.


Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan, head of the Centre for Health Protection’s communicable disease branch, said there is indeed a downward trend in the number of new infections, but is still too early to say whether the epidemic is now under control.

“I cannot say this is under control yet because usually what is meant by under control is if we don’t have any cases in at least one or two incubation periods,” Chuang said. “You need more than two weeks or a month.”

She also warned that given the global spread of the disease, Hong Kong will continue to detect new cases from residents coming from overseas.


“We will definitely have new cases,” she said.

Health Department official Sophia Chan warned of new transmissions from arriving mainland Chinese visitors, as the country starts reopening its borders.

But the risk of community clusters remains a big concern, since many people continue to ignore social distancing laws by flocking outdoors, especially amid the clear and sunny weather of the past three days.

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Photos in newspapers and on social media show beaches, hiking trails and parks again teeming with people. Even malls and tourist destinations like the Peak have attracted large crowds.

But Chan warned the coronavirus “does not know it is a holiday.”

Meanwhile, the Food & Environmental Hygiene Department (FEHD) has warned that it will start prosecuting restaurants that violate the new regulations on social distancing or crowd control.

Restaurants are warned they will be prosecuted if they do not follow the social distancing restrictions

Director Vivian Lau also said violators may be prohibited from receiving subsidies from the government, which range between $200,000 to $2million, depending on their size,

Lau said the FEHD has issued more than 17,000 verbal warnings and more than 30 fixed-penalty summonses since the new restrictions were imposed on Apr. 6.

She said the warning stage is over and restaurants that are henceforth found to have violated the prohibitions will be prosecuted immediately.

Under the new measure, all restaurants must take in only half their usual capacity. In addition, no more than four people may sit at each table, which must be at least 1.5 meters apart from the next table. 

Customers should also wear masks and must have their temperature checked before being allowed entry.

In addition, bars inside restaurants that primarily serve liquor must be closed off.
Violators face a fine of up to $50,000.

Lau also revealed that the FEHD has approved more than 2,000 applications in the first round of funding for the food industry, involving about $2.7 billion. A total fund of $3.8 billion has been allocated for this purpose.


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Another FDH returns to HK with Covid-19 as total tally hits 1,000-mark

Posted on 11 April 2020 No comments
By The SUN

The FDH flew in with her employers from the United Kingdom

Another foreign domestic worker who went with her employer’s family to Britain for two months is among the 11 new confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Hong Kong today, Apr 11, which took the city’s total to 1,001.

The 32-year-old helper was in the United Kingdom between Feb 1 and Apr 7, and had fever on Mar 28. She tested positive while under home quarantine in her employer's residence in Garden Terrace on Old Peak Road.
Her nationality was not immediately disclosed, but all three previous FDHs who tested positive after arriving from the UK with their employers are Filipinas. 

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Four other Filipina helpers were also found infected after arriving with their employers from France, Turkey, and two from the United States.
At least four other Filipinas have tested positive after arriving from Manila.
Of the new cases, only one was a local transmission. The 29-year-old woman had been to the All Night Long Bar in Tsim Sha Tsui, where a big number of the so-called bar cluster cases has been detected. Her boyfriend had tested positive earlier.

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At today’s press briefing, Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection again warned against people congregating in large numbers as what happened on Friday, the start of  the four-day Easter holiday.

“I observed that during Easter holiday a lot of people are going out, either to the restaurant or other place, so if they take public transport and they go to crowded places I think (they) need to maintain social distancing. Try to avoid going out as much as possible,” Dr Chuang said.

Dr Chuang says people should stay at home as much as possible during the long Easter holiday

Meanwhile, health officials have decided that starting on Monday, Apr 13, all residents arriving from the United States and European countries will need to take their mandatory deep throat saliva samples directly to the testing centre at AsiaWorld-Expo and wait for the results.

Only when the number of arriving passengers from the said countries exceed the maximum capacity of the testing centre will some be allowed to submit their saliva samples and go home for the mandatory 14-day self quarantine.
If they test positive, the passengers will be admitted to hospitals as soon as possible for treatment while those who traveled with them will be deemed as close contacts, and put in quarantine centres. 

Those who test negative will be allowed to go home for the 14-day monitored quarantine.

This procedure has been observed for all new arrivals from the U.K. starting on Apr 9, after test results showed that a majority of those who test positive for the virus have flown in from the country.

All other arriving passengers will still need to collect saliva samples, but they have the option of submitting it directly to AsiaWorld-Expo, or ask a relative or friend to submit the sample for them while they are undergoing quarantine.

Newly arrived Filipina among 16 new Covid-19 cases

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

The Filipina flew from Manila to HK on Apr 8

A Filipina who arrived from Manila two days ago is among the 16 new Covid-19 cases confirmed today, Apr 10, which raised Hong Kong’s total tally to 990.

The 38-year-old Filipina reportedly went to the Philippines for a vacation between Mar 17 to Apr 8, when she flew back into Hong Kong. She was on mandatory home quarantine and showed no symptoms when her test results returned a positive result. She is now in isolation at North District Hospital.

All, except one, case involved people with recent travel history.
The only known locally acquired case is that of a 28-year-old man who was infected after his girlfriend visited All Night Long Bar in Tsim Sha Tsui, which is tied to a big cluster of cases. He lost his sense of taste and smell on Mar 28 and is now confined in Tuen Mun Hospital.

Meanwhile, the Consulate will close for three days next week, Apr 14 to 16, for cleaning and disinfection, effectively extending its long holiday starting from Thursday, Apr 9, for 10 days, or until Saturday, Apr 18.
 
The PCG advisory announcing the effective  10-day closure was posted on Apr 9
The unexpected closure led to a number of Filipinos asking what would happen to their passport appointments on the days the Consulate decided to close for disinfection.

However, the notice on the Consulate’s Facebook page says “all clients with confirmed appointments will receive a notice regarding new appointment dates.”
But there was no explanation why the disinfection is being carried out on what should be working days for the Consulate, given that it was already closed down for a week previously due to a string of holidays.

In another development, Hong Kong health officials have warned against complacency, as thousands of residents took advantage of good weather at the start of a long Easter holiday to go to the beach and other popular gathering places.


Many people were encouraged to leave their homes after a big dip in the number of new infections


On Thursday, many people heaved a sigh of relief after the number of new Covid-13 cases dipped to a three-week low of 13, but the Centre for Health Protection’s Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan  said it was too early to say the infection is on the decline.

“I observed that many people are on the streets,” Chuang said. “If people relax their practice of maintaining social-distancing rules, there may be a new wave of infections by asymptomatic cases.”
Other health officials are warning of the public health system being overloaded, given that the number of infections each day is still more than the number of patients being discharged from hospitals after recovering.

To underline this problem, health authorities are now planning to send people in quarantine camps home after 10 days, or four days earlier, to free up much-needed space. The quarantine camps are said to be already 70 to 80 percent full.

On top of this, recovering patients who no longer show symptoms are already being moved from isolation rooms to isolation wards, to give way to new patients.

While the number of coronavirus tests had dropped to between 2,000 to 3,000 a day compared to a peak of 5,000, Chuang said the decline was due to fewer arrivals and the number of suspected cases admitted to hospitals.

It does not mean there could be no more local outbreaks because many of those who tested positive recently are asymptomatic.

Migrants demand accounting of virus relief aid for OFWs

Posted on 10 April 2020 No comments
By The SUN

Balladares reminding fellow OFWs to follow govt rules on social distancing amid the pandemic

A migrant worker’s group is calling for an accounting of billions of pesos in funds allotted by the Philippine government to help overseas Filipino workers whose jobs have been affected by the novel coronavirus pandemic.

The call followed the Department of Labor and Employment’s release on Apr 8 of the details of the Php10,000 (or USD200) cash aid to be given to OFWs who have contracted Covid-19 or lost their jobs because of the disease.

A subsequent post by the Philippine Overseas Labor Office said applicants for the so-called Dole Akap program (1) must not be a HK resident, and (2) has lost his/her job (temporary o permanent) because of Covid-19 and is not getting any financial support from the HK government or an employer.



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Dolores Balladares, chair of United Filipinos (Migrante) in Hong Kong, said in a statement on Apr 9 that Php1.5 billion has been allotted for OFWs from the massive Php275 billion emergency relief fund granted to President Rodrigo Duterte by Congress to fight the Covid-19 pandemic.

But according to Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III’s own estimated, only 70,000 OFWs stand to benefit from the fund, which means only Php700 million, or less than half the allocated budget, will go to them.

“Where would the rest of the money go?,” Balladares asked.

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She said that while OFWs appreciate that money has been set aside for them from the relief fund, the financial aid will not go far in helping those who have lost their jobs.

“Did the government consider Php10,000 financial assistance to a Covid-19 victim sufficient to cover the patient’s needs and that of his family?” she said in her statement.

She also said the government should consider whether money intended to help OFWs really reaches its beneficiaries.

Some of the thousands of stranded OFWs who applied for the OWWA aid
She cited as example the Php300 million set aside by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration for OFWs stranded in the Philippines because of a temporary travel ban imposed on travelers to China, Macau and Hong Kong in February.

“Thousands of stranded OFWs did not receive any financial assistance due to the bureaucratic procedure. Where did the funds for this program go?” she asked.

Balladares said that more than a one-off aid, affected OFWs need a job on their return to the Philippines.


“Create jobs at home, this is our urgent call,” she said.

In the meantime, she said the Consulate and Polo should give full assistance and relief to OFWs who have lost their jobs. She also called for a moratorium on the fees charged them by the two government agencies.

According to the Polo advisory, those applying for the USD200 cash relief must submit the following: passport and visa copy, HK ID, verified employment contract, airline ticket (if any), proof of loss of employment due to Covid-19, and for those who have been infected, a medical certificate.

Claims may be made by accomplishing a form posted on the Facebook page of POLO – Hong Kong SAR and submitting it to hk.doleakap@gmail.com for evaluation. Those who are already in the Philippines should go to the OWWA regional office nearest them.

Retailers start getting $80k cash aid today; have only until Apr 12 to apply

Posted on 09 April 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Many retailers in World Wide Plaza in Central have applied for the $80k cash assistance

Retail shops that sell goods for personal or household consumption started receiving today, Apr 9, their direct cash subsidy of up to $80,000 from the government.

Those who intend to apply for the financial aid, given to those struggling to stay afloat amid the coronavirus pandemic, have only until Sunday, Apr 12, to do so. The vetting of applicants is expected to be completed within May.

Separately, those in the restaurant and food business may apply for a one-off cash assistance of between $80,000 and $200,000 from an anti-epidemic fund administered by the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department.

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Among those who have applied for the retail subsidy is Joy Tan, who operates a Philippine products and general merchandise store in World Wide Plaza in Central.

Tan, along with many shop owners in the mall, have been hit hard, not just by the contagion, but also by the violent protests that wracked the city in the second half of last year, forcing customers to stay away from several hotspots, including Central.

 
Joy Tan hopes her $80k cash subsidy will come soon
Tan hopes to get the maximum cash assistance of $80,000 from the government. She says she has been given a reference number for her application, but has yet to receive the money.

Another applicant is longtime entrepreneur Ramaliel Soabas, better known as Mang Ambo, which is also the name of his iconic food outlet in World Wide.

But Soabas says he was turned down for the retail subsidy because he has already received $80k for his food factory in Kennedy Town, under the FEHD funding scheme.

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He had hoped to get separate cash assistance for each of his businesses as he pays separate rents for them, and both are cutting deep into what’s left of his income.

He says the $80,000 given him by FEHD is just enough to cover three months of back rental for his World Wide shop.
 
Mang Ambo got $80k from FEHD, but not for his tiny shop in WWide for which he pays more than $20k monthly rent

Both Tan and Soabas say many other shop owners in World Wide Plaza have applied for the retail subsidy, which is done online, and is quick and easy.

According to a press release from the government, more than 79,000 applications have been received since the retail subsidy scheme opened on March 23.

The disbursement of the subsidy to approved applicants is being done through bank transfer.

As for the FEHD-run scheme, the application started on Mar 5 and will end on May 4 at 5 pm.
Under this scheme, a one-off subsidy of $200,000 will be given to license holders of restaurants and factory canteens. Those who operate light refreshment restaurants, fresh provision shops, food factories, bakeries and dim sum shops, will get $80,000 each

Even licensed hawkers are entitled to relief of $5,000 each from the scheme.

About 5,500 licensed hawkers are expected to benefit, along with 28,000 food license holders.

Those who wish to apply for the FEHD-run funding scheme may check this website: https://www.fehd.gov.hk/english/events/Anti-epidemic_Fund/index.html

For the details of the retail subsidy scheme, click on this link: https://www.retailsubsidy.gov.hk/en/, or call 1836 111.


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