HONG KONG 鈥 People arriving in Hong Kong by international flights can immediately visit the city鈥檚 restaurants, gyms and other venues for the first time in almost three years, with the scrapping of restrictions that barred them from such places for the first three days.
The ending on Wednesday of an amber code that had been previously issued to international arrivals was announced on Tuesday by Chief Executive John Lee. Arriving people now have no movement restrictions but they need to do a PCR COVID test on arrival and again two days after arriving.
Hong Kong鈥檚 government also scrapped a mandatory COVID-19 mobile application on Wednesday which was used for people to check in at most venues from gyms and beauty salons to offices.
People will still need to show a photograph or paper record of their COVID-19 vaccines at some venues which require it, the government said.
鈥淚 think the government鈥檚 COVID policy has not always been consistent, it changes according to what happen in other places,鈥 said a 40-year old local resident who gave his surname as Ngai.
鈥淢ost of the residents want the city to reopen soon and ease the restrictions.鈥
Another resident, 36-year-old Lisa Ketelsen, said: 鈥淚 think we are headed the right direction with the measures.鈥
In another loosening measure, the government announced late on Tuesday that travelers arriving in Hong Kong are free to continue directly to mainland China or Macau as long as they meet the required criteria. Under previous COVID-19 rules, travellers had to wait three days in the city before continuing to the mainland.
The move comes after China jettisoned some of the world鈥檚 toughest restrictions meant to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.
Hong Kong has closely followed China鈥檚 zero-COVID policy since 2020 but began gradually easing restrictions in August, cutting mandated hotel quarantine to three days before scrapping it completely in September, more than two and a half years after the virus emerged.
The rules have weighed on Hong Kong鈥檚 economy since early 2020, speeding up an exodus of businesses, expatriates and local families who departed amid a drive by Beijing to more closely control the former British colony.