Hong Kong Mask Mandate, One of World’s Last, Will End

Asia Pacific|Hong Kong, One of World’s Last Holdouts, Ends Its Mask Mandate

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/27/world/asia/hong-kong-mask-mandate.html

As of Wednesday, people in the city will no longer be required to wear masks indoors, outdoors or on public transportation.

A Hong Kong street scene, with several people in masks walking down a sidewalk, most in business attire. At left, through a window, a young, unmasked man in a cafe can be seen using a laptop.
For years, Hong Kong has required people to wear masks outdoors as well as indoors, with some exceptions. Credit…Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

Hong Kong’s leader said on Tuesday that the city would lift its mask mandate, one of the last such policies in the world, as it winds down its once-stringent Covid control measures.

“Evidence shows that the coronavirus is under control in Hong Kong, without major signs of rebound,” the city’s chief executive, John Lee, said at a news briefing.

Starting Wednesday, people will no longer be required to wear masks indoors, outdoors or on public transportation, though facilities like hospitals and nursing homes can still require employees and visitors to wear them, Mr. Lee said. Previously, those who failed to wear masks in public were fined about $635.

Hong Kong’s strict Covid policies, which until last year included limits on group gatherings, flight bans and long hotel quarantines, had been increasingly criticized by business leaders and others, who said the controls were damaging the city’s attractiveness as a finance center and tourist destination. Macau, the nearby gambling hub, which like Hong Kong is a Chinese territory, ended its outdoor mask mandate on Monday.

“With the removal of the mask mandate, Hong Kong will return to normalcy all around, and in this year and the coming year will go all out for the economy and development at full speed,” Mr. Lee said.

This is a developing story.

Read More
Tiffany May

Latest

Song Dynasty: Ancient Poets Find New Fans on China’s Music Apps

Music From the Tang dynasty’s Li Bai (701–762) to...

‘The Book of Mormon’ Will Close for 2 Weeks After Fire

Music Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerRead...

Universal Music Fires Back Against Salt-N-Pepa Appeal in High-Stakes Copyright Termination Legal Battle

Music Photo Credit: David BurkeMusic Universal Music Group (UMG)...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Song Dynasty: Ancient Poets Find New Fans on China’s Music Apps

Music From the Tang dynasty’s Li Bai (701–762) to...

‘The Book of Mormon’ Will Close for 2 Weeks After Fire

Music Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerRead...

Universal Music Fires Back Against Salt-N-Pepa Appeal in High-Stakes Copyright Termination Legal Battle

Music Photo Credit: David BurkeMusic Universal Music Group (UMG)...

13 Real Business Trip Stories That Prove Work Travel Collects More Stories Than Miles

Real business trips almost never go the way the itinerary promised. They start with a confidently-packed suitcase and an eight-page agenda, and somewhere between the airport gate and the hotel breakfast they quietly turn into something nobody could have invented — equal parts comedy, chaos, and unscheduled adventure. These 13 real business trip moments are exactly that kind of work-trip plot

Your business texts could look like scam messages from July 1 if you don’t act now

From July 1, any branded SMS your business sends without a registered sender ID will be labelled “Unverified” and grouped with scam messages.  What’s happening: From 1 July 2026, any business or organisation that sends SMS using a branded name, such as “MyShop” or “AcmeServices”, instead of a phone number, must have that sender ID

Business groups are fighting Labor’s CGT changes. Here is where SMEs stand

Labor’s most contested tax reform in a generation cleared its first formal hurdle on Thursday and immediately ran into organised resistance. Treasurer Jim Chalmers introduced the government’s tax reform legislation to the House of Representatives on 28 May, bundling together four budget measures: the capital gains tax overhaul, new limits on negative gearing, a $250