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Hong Kong is increasingly shut off as inbound flights drop

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 3 min read
Hong Kong is increasingly shut off as inbound flights drop
Cathay Pacific Airways has almost halved the number of flights into Hong Kong from outside China next month.
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Hong Kong is becoming increasingly shut off from the outside world because of its strict Covid-19 policies as the city imposes a raft of flight bans and airlines slash inbound services.

Cathay Pacific Airways has almost halved the number of flights into Hong Kong from outside China next month, according to aviation data company Cirium, in the wake of tougher quarantine restrictions on flight crew.

The city’s marquee carrier has scheduled just 150 inbound services in January, the lowest monthly total since May. Before the pandemic, the figure was close to 4,000.

Hong Kong has been conforming to China’s Covid Zero strategy, which seeks to eliminate all trace of the virus, as the city seeks to re-establish quarantine-free travel with the mainland. Authorities have imposed some of the world’s most stringent travel rules, with overseas visitors required to quarantine for up to three weeks, some in temporary camps.

Concerns are now mounting Hong Kong will be left behind as other major cities attempt to live with Covid as endemic and reopen their economies.

See also: BioNTech beats estimates as vaccine maker pursues more diseases


Countries including France have also brought back travel restrictions to contain the rapidly spreading strain.

Cathay had this week flagged “significant” changes to its schedules, including axing some flights to and from Hong Kong, because of tighter quarantine restrictions for aircrew. According to the South China Morning Post, crew working on non-China passenger flights lost all quarantine-related exemptions from this week. Late Thursday, Cathay said it had suspended all long-haul freighter and cargo-only passenger flights for seven days due to the new rules.

British Airways has scrapped flights to Hong Kong entirely until March because of the tighter measures. All told, the world’s airlines are planning 758 services — excluding those from mainland China — into the city in January, according to Cirium. That is down from 791 this month and about 11,000 before the pandemic.

See also: Covid-19 global health emergency is over after three years: WHO

The opposite is happening in rival financial hub Singapore. The city-state has struck agreements with more than 20 countries for quarantine-free air travel, though it froze ticket sales for those lanes this month to combat Omicron.

Airlines have scheduled 4,370 services to Singapore in January, according to Cirium data. That would be the most monthly in-bound flights since March 2020.

Omicron has disrupted a nascent recovery of international air travel over the usually busy Christmas holiday, and Hong Kong is not alone in its bid to fight off the new virus variant. Countries including France have also brought back travel restrictions to contain the rapidly spreading strain.

On Thursday, Hong Kong announced two preliminary positive Covid patients who had no travel history, marking the first community flareup in nearly seven months. The cases are both linked to an aircrew member who tested positive with omicron.

The reductions to scheduled flights to Hong Kong early next year follow weeks of crackdowns on airlines including Air India and Emirates that have operated inbound flights carrying infected passengers. Authorities on Thursday closed an additional three routes operated by Finnair Oyj, Turkish Airlines and Cebu Pacific for two weeks for breaking Covid-19 prevention rules.

Photos: Bloomberg

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