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Hong Kong churches hold Sunday masses again after 4-month break

Posted on 08 June 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Everyone must wear a mask during the service, and to keep distance from the next person
June 7 marked the first Sunday when public masses were again held in Catholic churches across Hong Kong, after being halted for nearly four months due to the coronavirus outbreak.

But weekday masses started six days earlier, after the Catholic Diocese outfitted churches to comply with the government’s social distancing measures.
The new rules include limiting the number of people inside a church at no more than 50% of its normal capacity, and worshippers are to put on face masks and cleanse their hands with sanitizer.

In addition, seats are kept at least a meter apart, no hymnals or mass booklets are distributed or left on the pews, seats are cleansed and disinfected after each mass, the host during communion is received only by hand, and the sign of peace is expressed by bowing heads, instead of kissing or shaking hands.

The ubiquitous hand sanitizer which worshippers are asked to use before and after taking communion

In his video-recorded message on May 22 to announce the resumption of public masses, Catholic Cardinal John Tong said that those who fear contracting the virus may continue attending online masses during which they can receive “spiritual Communion.”

Alternatively, they can attend mass on a weekday in lieu of Sunday, given the limited number of seats inside churches as part of the anti-Covid measures.
Cardinal Tong said he decided on the measures that needed to be taken after consulting with medical professionals.

The holding of public masses or services was suspended by most churches in Hong Kong since Feb. 15 on the advice of the government, as the coronavirus contagion in China became more severe.
Schools were also closed at the same time, while civil servants doing non-emergency work were told to work from home.

The churches were supposed to stop holding public masses for only two weeks, but as the coronavirus began spreading in Hong Kong and in many other parts of the world, the suspension was extended indefinitely.
Churches remained open during set hours, however, but only for private prayers and meditation.

In place of public masses, churches started holding live broadcasts of their daily services through the internet.
One of the priests whose daily masses were livestreamed through the internet was Fr. Jay Flandez, chaplain of Filipinos, who was assisted by the El Shaddai group and some seminarians during the service.

Sunday masses at the Cathedral in Mid-Levels were also made available online.


The online options got wider when most big churches in the Philippines also began airing their masses via the internet, after they were forced to shut amid the rising number of Covid-19 infections in the country.
Only three people are allowed to seat in each pew

Despite many people in Hong Kong saying they missed going to an actual mass instead of “attending” one online, many of the seats in church today were empty.

It may be because of the heavy rain that poured throughout the day, but it could also be because people had gotten used to hearing mass on demand, in the comfort of their homes.

Filipina who just arrived from Manila tests positive for Covid-19 in HK

Posted on No comments
By The SUN

The Filipina was tested on arrival at Hong Kong International Airport on Jun 6 

A 25-year-old Filipina who recently arrived from Manila was reported on Sunday, Jun 7, as Hong Kong’s 1,107th case of Covid-19.

The woman, apparently a migrant worker as she is said to live in the Philippines, had no symptoms when she arrived at Hong Kong International Airport on Saturday, Jun 6.


Pindutin para sa detalye

But she was found to have the virus after undergoing mandatory testing at AsiaWorld-Expo, and was taken straight to Princess Margaret Hospital for treatment.

She was among a handful of people, all asymptomatic, who were found to have coronavirus on arrival in Hong Kong from Manila. 




One of the most recent was a Filipina domestic worker who went to WorldWide House in Central from the airport, and was found infected two days later, after she had started her home quarantine in Taipo.

Another was a male student who tested positive a day after undergoing home quarantine in Tung Chung.
The Centre for Health Protection said during its daily briefing that almost 1,400 tests had been carried out among residents of a building in a Shatin housing estate where a recent cluster of local cases had broken out, but all came back negative.

But nine samples are being collected again because of what officials had described as a “leakage.”




Seven residents of the housing block in Lek Yuen estate were found to have the virus during tests last week. As a result, around 100 residents of flats numbered 12 and 10, where the infections had occurred, were evacuated and taken to quarantine centers.
But residents of three flats could not be located, and health authorities have sent out an appeal for them to come forward so they could be tested.






3 new Covid-19 infections reported in HK

Posted on 07 June 2020 No comments
By The SUN

Two new patients flew in from Pakistan, the third one from Britain (file photo by Marites Palma)

Hong Kong has reported three more imported cases of Covid-19 infections, bringing the total tally to 1,105.

Two of the patients, aged 17 and 47, returned from Pakistan. The third, a 26-year-old female, flew in from Britain.

All three reported having symptoms, like fever, cough, and loss of sense of taste or smell.
But the returnee from Britain said she developed symptoms in mid-March, but was asymptomatic when she arrived in Hong Kong.

There were no local cases reported today, Jun 6.

But this did not stop Shatin residents from demanding a halt in the re-opening of classes in primary and secondary grades this coming Monday, Jun 8.


The housing estate where a local outbreak occurred last week involving six residents, is located in the district.

Two dozen student concern groups from secondary schools in Shatin have urged a further suspension of classes, one day after 30 district councilors issued a similar warning.

The councilors said it will be hard to maintain social distancing among the young students, so the infection risk is high.
 
The  source of the infection in Luk Chuen House is still  unknown

The source of the infection in Luk Chuen House in Lek Yuen estate is still not known, but an infectious disease expert said the virus must have been spread partly by exhaust fans.

The index patient, a 34-year-old woman, lives in a flat numbered 12, along with her husband, who also tested positive. Two other patients live in separate flats, both numbered 12 as well. Another lives in a flat numbered 10.
The expert said that since the first confirmed patient lives in a floor below the other infected patients, it was not likely the virus spread through the sewage pipes as was previously thought.

Two other infected residents live on the same floor as the first reported patient, though with different numbered flats. Experts say the contamination must have also come from frequently touched surfaces, like the lift buttons.
As a precaution, health officials evacuated 75 residents from flats numbered 12 and 10 in the building.

It also conducted 1,363 tests on other residents, but all came back negative, except for the confirmed cases.

Residents of four household who appear to have fled their flats are now being sought so they could also be tested.

Congen Tejada sees off 80 stranded OFWs bound for Mla at HK Airport

Posted on 06 June 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

A big delegation from the Consulate led by Congen Tejada saw off the OFWs  at HK Airport

A total of 80 Filipino domestic workers who were stuck in Hong Kong because of flight cancellations managed to get on a Cathay Pacific plane bound for Manila early today, Jun 6, after getting help from the Consulate.

Consul General Raly Tejada personally bid goodbye to them at the airport, along with some of his staff and officers from the Philippine Overseas Labor Office.


The Consulate contingent gave free food to the departing overseas Filipino workers, and stayed on until all had boarded their CX 907 flight which departed at 7:20am.

ConGen Tejada said in response to an inquiry via messenger that the passengers could not leave earlier because of repeated flight cancellations by Cathay and Hong Kong Airlines.


Both airlines never stopped flying daily to Manila, except for the days when the Philippine government halted inbound flights in order to decongest quarantine facilities where around 30,000 newly returned OFWs were kept for up to two months.

HK Airport was buzzing as the OFWs checked in for their 7:20am flight

Last week, 24,000 of those who tested negative for the coronavirus were finally allowed to leave the facilities and proceed to their respective hometowns where they put under another 14-day quarantine.

The air fare for the OFWs who flew home today was reportedly paid for by their respective employers, in line with Hong Kong’s labour law.


The flight was a mix of passengers with previously cancelled tickets, those with future flights that had been rebooked, and those with regular bookings for today. The Consulate merely consolidated their flights so they could leave as a group.
 
Congen Tejada (with glasses) held  the Philippine flag aloft in a final goodbye to the OFWs 

According to Consul Paul Saret, head of the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section, a second batch of OFWs will leave on Jun 10 on the same flight, CX 907.

Immigration figures show nearly 7,000 Filipino domestic workers have lost their jobs since February, when the first coronavirus cases were reported in Hong Kong.


Their numbers declined the most between March and April, when more than 3,000 lost their jobs.

However, recruitment agencies say up to 15,000 Hong Kong-bound workers are just waiting for the travel restrictions to ease further in the Philippines before flying out.


Returning OFWs will stay only up to 5 days in Mla, says official

Posted on No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Latest batch of repatriated OFWs arrived in Manila from UAE on Jun 3 

Returning or repatriated overseas Filipino workers will stay a maximum of only five days in Manila while waiting for their Covid-19 test results before being sent to their home provinces, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said Friday, Jun 5.

Lorenzana said in an interview that this is to prevent a repeat of the previous incident when 24,000 OFWs were stuck in quarantine centers for up to two months even after testing negative for the virus.

After several well-publicized stories about the plight of the stranded OFWs, President Rodrigo Duterte ordered them to be brought home within a week.


“Ayaw na po nating mangyari iyong nakaraan na umabot ng isang buwan, napagakasunduan po namin na limang araw lang ang maximum na nasa Maynila ang OFWs,”  Lorenzana said.

(We want to avoid a repeat of what happened in the past when they were quarantined for up to a month, so we decided that the OFWs will remain in Manila for a maximum of five days).

He also said that for the 42,000 OFWs expected to be flown home within the month, only between 1,200 to 1,500 OFWs will be allowed to enter the country each day, to avoid overcrowding in the quarantine facilities.
He clarified the government will pay for the swab tests and accommodation only of OFWs and not other incoming passengers.

Earlier, the deputy chief implementer of the government’s Covid-19 response said Clark International Airport would begin accepting repatriated overseas Filipino workers starting Jun 5 so they could go straight to their hometown to quarantine.


Clark Airport is all spruced up for its reopening, but no OFWs arrived on Jun 5


Bases Conversion and Development Authority president Vince Dizon made the announcement on Jun 4, saying other international airports in the country would follow suit.

“Ang gagawin po natin ngayon sa mga susunod na linggo ay idi-decentralize na po natin ang arrivals ng ating mga OFWs,” Dizon said in a televised briefing aired on television.

“Magsisimula po iyan sa pagtanggap ng Clark International Airport bukas ng mga flights galing sa abroad dala ang ating mga OFWs,” Dizon said.


(In the coming weeks, we will decentralize the arrivals of the OFWs. It will start with Clark International Airport accepting flights from abroad carrying our OFWs from tomorrow).

“At dahil po tumataas na ang capacity ng ating mga probinsya at ng ating mga siyudad sa labas ng Metro Manila, magagawa na po natin ito ngayon para po mapadali ang pag-uwi at makasama ng ating mga kababayang mga OFWs ang kanilang mga pamilya.”

(And since the testing capacity of our provinces and cities outside Metro Manila has improved, we can now do this so our OFWs could go home faster and be with their families sooner).
A check of Clark’s Facebook page, however, showed that there were no commercial or sweeper flights scheduled to arrive at the airport on Jun 5. Two AirAsia flights bound for Cagayan de Oro and Davao City were apparently also canceled, based on comments from passengers.

Neither has the Department of Foreign Affairs, which regularly posts photos and stories about repatriation flights, posted any recent flights on its website.

All OFW repatriation flights currently land at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila.

All returning OFWs are required to undergo testing for Covid-19, and stay at a quarantine facility in Metro Manila before being allowed to return to their home provinces.

The Philippines has recorded 20,626 covid-19 as of Jun 5. Of these, 4,330 have recovered while 987 died.

Exhaust fans could have spread virus, says expert, as 3 new imported cases recorded

Posted on No comments
By The SUN
 
Residents of Luk Chuen House were evacuated Thursday night and taken to quarantine centers (RTHK photo)

Three new cases of coronavirus infections were reported today, Jun 5, all involving residents recently arrived from overseas, bringing Hong Kong’s total tally to 1,102.

The first two cases are a 73-year-old woman and her eight-year-old granddaughter who returned from India on Thursday, the second flight chartered by the government to bring residents home.

They’re the first returnees from India to have tested positive for Covid-19.


The third patient is a  49-year-old woman who had flown in from London earlier Friday, and tested positive on arrival at the airport.

Centre for Health Protection officials said they are also investigating the case of a 68-year-old man who arrived from Canada Thursday, and said he had earlier tested positive for the virus.

At today’s press briefing, health officials also announced that 75 residents of flats 12 and 10 in Luk Chuen House in Lek Yuen estate were evacuated overnight, and moved to  a quarantine facility.
The Shatin housing estate is where six of the patients in the latest local cluster of cases live. Five live in flats numbered 12, and one in a number 10 flat.

The index patient who lives in a number 12 flat, appears to have infected  her husband, two of her colleagues in a Kerry warehouse in Kwai Chung, and the ambulanceman who took her to hospital.

The CHP said it has collected 1,352 deep-throat saliva samples from residents of the estate, and all came back negative except for the ones that have already been reported.


Meanwhile, the South China Morning Post reported that a leading infectious disease expert has said that kitchen exhaust fans could have led to the spread of the virus.

Professor Yuen Kwok-hung said in an interview in the Post that he believed the exhaust fans in the kitchen could have spread the virus among residents of the three numbered 12 flats,

Yuen said the first reported case was on a lower floor and three more recent ones lived in flats above, so it was not likely sewage pipes could have caused the spread of the virus.

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“A patient who has a high viral load could blast out air (with the virus) when cooking,” he is quoted as saying.

“If the flats above did not turn on their extraction fans, and the wind was blowing towards those flats, people there could have got infected.”

In a separate interview, respiratory expert David Hui said Lek Yuen residents should not have been allowed to leave their homes as this has increased the risk of community transmission.

Some scared tenants had been seen fleeing the estate despite appeals from the government to stay put while more investigations are being carried out.





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