Hong Kong further loosens social distancing measures
HONG KONG - Hong Kong announced Wednesday further relaxation of social distancing measures so that lives of residents can gradually return to normal as daily new COVID-19 infections remained on a losing streak.
Effective for seven days since Friday, a dine-in ban for restaurants will be loosened to 10 pm, while diners currently are prohibited from eating in after 9 pm, Sophia Chan, Secretary for Food and Health of the government of China's Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, said at a press conference Wednesday afternoon.
Gyms, massage parlors, and some indoor and outdoor stadiums can also reopen on condition of anti-disease measures, Chan said.
Hong Kong already cautiously relaxed some restrictions over social activities last week as the epidemic situation showed signs of easing. New cases stood at nine and 12 on Monday and Tuesday, respectively, down significantly from the peak of triple-digit growth.
Despite the loosening, mandatory mask-wearing rules in public areas and a ban on group gathering over two will continue.
Chan also called on residents to actively participate in an ongoing universal community testing program aimed at screening asymptomatic patients and cutting transmissions. The government said more than 120,000 people took virus tests on Monday, the first day of the program.
- Forest and grassland fires fell to a record low in 2025
- Miao ethnic group celebrates Tiaohua Festival in Guizhou
- Chinese courts wrapped up 168,000 maritime cases during the 14th Five-Year Plan period
- China strengthens forest, grassland fire prevention, control
- Mainland calls out hypocrisy of 'Taiwan independence' separatists
- China to implement unified coding system for death certificates nationwide































