Hong Kong is hunting down officials who attended a large party after a guest tested positive for COVID-19. The city’s home affairs secretary has already been sent to a quarantine camp.

OSTN Staff

Hong Kong Secretary for Home Affairs, Caspar Tsui Ying-wai with face mask.
Hong Kong Secretary for Home Affairs, Caspar Tsui has been sent to a quarantine camp.

  • Hong Kong has a stringent Covid-zero approach and is tightening restrictions as Omicron cases rise.
  • On Monday, 10 Hong Kong government officials attended a birthday party with over 100 people.
  • The home affairs secretary has been sent to a quarantine camp after a partygoer tested positive.

The Hong Kong government is tracking down officials who attended a large party where a guest later tested positive for COVID-19.

Ten government officials attended the gathering with more than 100 others on Monday, said Hong Kong chief executive Carrie Lam at a Thursday press conference. Among them were home affairs secretary Caspar Tsui and the Commissioner of Police Raymond Siu, she said.

Tsui was sent to a COVID-19 quarantine camp, Lam said, because he was present when a COVID-positive positive attendee arrived at 9.30 p.m. Other guests included legislative assistants and those involved in political work, reported the South China Morning Post, citing unnamed sources.

Local media outlets HK01 and Now News reported the party was for Witman Hung, a Hong Kong delegate to China’s top legislature.

Lam said authorities were contacting other government officials and political appointees to find out if they had attended the event and were around when the COVID-positive guest was present.

The scandal is sparking anger in Hong Kong, which has a stringent Covid-zero strategy. This week, the financial hub further tightened restrictions, including banning indoor dining after 6 p.m. from Friday, amid a rise in Omicron cases. There are 140 Omicron cases in Hong Kong so far, said the government.

“I am very disappointed because this anti-pandemic work has persisted for so long. So many of us have been working so hard to fight against the pandemic, so as principal officials of the administration, we should lead by example and refrain from taking part in private events,” Lam said, according to a South China Morning Post translation.

Lam said the officials were attending what was “clearly a private event, and not a function required by public duty,” per SCMP.

The party scandal surfaced days after Lam took several top Cathay Pacific officials to task after some aircrew workers flouted COVID-19 rules.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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