Follow us for updates
© 2020 reportr.world
Read the Story →

We Can't Wait to Stopover in Hong Kong Again

Actually, we can't wait to travel again. Anywhere.
by Agence France Presse
May 26, 2020
In this picture taken on April 4, 2020, a worker wearing a face mask, amid concerns of the COVID-19 coronavirus, walks past closed check-in counters at Hong Kong International Airport.
Photo/s: DALE DE LA REY / AFP
Shares
Shares

Here's good news for travelers who use Hong Kong as a convenient stopover to the rest of the world.

Hong Kong will partly resume transit services at its international airport next week, the city's leader announced Tuesday, as the business hub gradually reopens while keeping the coronavirus at bay.

Hong Kong's airport is one of the world's busiest but arrivals and flights have collapsed in the wake of the global pandemic.

"Transit services at the airport, which have been suspended since March 25, will partly resume on June 1," Chief Executive Carrie Lam told reporters.

Further details on lifting transit flight restrictions were expected to be unveiled at a press conference by health officials later in the afternoon. 

Hong Kong was one of the first places to record the COVID-19 disease when it broke out of mainland China. 

But the city has since made impressive headway against the virus with a little over 1,000 recorded infections and four deaths out of a population of 7.5 million people.

Continue reading below ↓

Tuesday marked 11 consecutive days with no recorded local infections.

Anyone arriving at the airport is not allowed into the city until they take a coronavirus test. Those found to be positive are immediately quarantined. 

Many businesses including bars were forced to shut in March and April but have since reopened.

Karaoke lounges, nightclubs, saunas and party rooms will be allowed to reopen on Friday, Lam said.

Hong Kong's airport was ranked the largest air cargo hub and the fourth largest international passenger centre in 2019 by the Airports Council International, handling 4.8 million metric tonnes of cargo and over 71 million international passengers. 

Arrivals dropped last year during anti-government protests that rocked the city for months. 

© Agence France-Presse

READ MORE STORIES ABOUT