Hong Kong Disneyland reopens as Covid cases ease but deaths rise in Shanghai
Enthusiastic visitors ran into Disneyland the moment the gates opened after a three-month closure.
Hong Kong has relaxed pandemic restrictions, with Disneyland and museums reopening and night-time restaurant dining resuming as the city’s worst Covid-19 outbreak appears to be fading.
Enthusiastic visitors ran into Disneyland the moment the gates opened after a three-month closure.
Popular theme parks were ordered to close in January as Hong Kong’s fifth wave of coronavirus took hold.
Nearly 1.2 million people in the city of 7.4 million were infected in less than four months, and nearly 9,000 have died.
“Last night she was so excited, she didn’t want to go to sleep.”
The city was caught off-guard as the surge, driven by the highly transmissible Omicron variant, overwhelmed hospitals.
At the peak of the outbreak, bodies had to be stored in refrigerated containers because mortuaries could not cope.
The easing of restrictions came after officials acknowledged that people were getting frustrated with the measures, and that there must be a balance between fighting the epidemic and resumption of normal activities.
The relaxation of measures before Hong Kong has reached zero Covid-19 cases marks a shift from the city’s earlier strategy, which was aligned to mainland China’s zero-tolerance for any outbreaks.
Previously, authorities were reluctant to ease measures until it was clear that outbreaks in the city were stamped out.
A 15-year-old student, Cynthia Cheung, said Disneyland was her “happiest place”.
“I really missed it.”
Theme parks are currently allowed to operate at 50% capacity, and visitors must show proof of vaccination.
Disney employees held up signs reminding people to keep social distance.
In mainland China, the death toll rose to 25 in an outbreak in Shanghai that has all but shut down the country’s largest city.
Health authorities said on Thursday that eight more people had died in the previous day.
The relatively low number of reported deaths highlights China’s use of much narrower criteria than the rest of the world for its pandemic statistics.
Shanghai has eased the lockdown somewhat in areas that have not reported new cases in seven to 14 days, allowing residents out of their homes but still restricting them to their compounds or neighbourhoods.
Officials said this week that 12.3 million people in the city of 25 million are now in “control” or “prevention” areas, which are less restrictive than lockdown zones in a three-tier system.
That is four million more than 10 days ago, they said.
However, one of the city’s 16 districts announced on Thursday that no residents would be allowed to leave their compounds.
The Jing’an district in central Shanghai said that even those in prevention areas, the least restrictive zone, would no longer be able to venture into the surrounding neighbourhood.
The city reported 18,495 new local cases on Thursday, including 15,861 without symptoms.
In eastern Shanghai, some residents were ordered to leave their homes while health workers carried out a large-scale disinfection following a spike in infections, according to news reports and social media posts.
It was not clear how many people in Beicai town were affected.
Photos published by The Paper, an online news outlet, showed workers in hooded, white protective suits spraying disinfectant in homes.
In Hong Kong, a semi-autonomous Chinese region, attractions such as Ocean Park and M+ museum reopened on Thursday.
Gyms, beauty salons and massage parlours were also allowed to resume business.
Customers must have at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine and scan a QR code upon entry for contact-tracing purposes.
Restaurants, which had been barred from providing dine-in service after 6pm, can reopen in the evening, although each table is capped at four guests.
Hong Kong reported 603 locally spread infections on Thursday, down more than 99% from the peak of more than 30,000 in March.