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Parents separated from babies as Hong Kong clings to zero-Covid
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 24 - 02 - 2022

Fighting back tears, Laura and Nick struggle to comfort their sobbing 11-month-old daughter, Ava, through a phone screen.
"Bubba, we love you...we're going to come and get you darling. We will," Laura says, in a video of a phone call with their child the parents shared with CNN.
They're in the same city, but Laura and Nick aren't allowed to visit Ava at Hong Kong's Queen Mary Hospital, where the infant is recovering from Covid-19 after testing positive on Monday. They've asked CNN not to publish their full names for privacy reasons.
Hong Kong's strict rules ban contact between Covid-19 patients and their immediate families who do not test positive, even the youngest patients like Ava.
The city's not in full lockdown, but authorities are tightening measures to combat its fifth and most serious wave of Covid-19, including rolling out mandatory mass testing of its more than 7 million residents.
The mandatory testing drive has led to widespread fears throughout the city that, as more positive cases are identified, more families could be separated -- with children placed in isolation.
On the video, Laura breaks down as Ava sobs. "I can't bear it," she says, as her husband makes a desperate appeal to a nurse, who appears to be holding the phone.
"Nurse, just give her some comfort please," Nick begs, as a nurse wearing a full hazmat suit appears on the screen, her face covered with a shield.
Under Hong Kong policy, Ava can only be discharged if she tests negative seven days after her admission. Laura and Nick are planning to take a Covid test; they say they hope it will be positive, so they have a chance of being reunited with their daughter in a government-run quarantine camp.
"We're just helpless. We are really helpless," Laura told CNN. "This is not in the best interest of her that she's without us. She needs us and we need her."
For almost two years, Hong Kong relied on a combination of stringent quarantines and track-and-trace efforts to isolate positive cases, keeping the city comparatively virus-free.
But those measures no longer appear sufficient in the face of the latest wave, which officials have described as a "tsunami."
Hong Kong has reported about five times more cases in the past three weeks than the entire pandemic combined. On Wednesday, the city reported a record 8,674 new cases -- the vast majority the highly contagious Omicron variant.
Still, Hong Kong continues to adhere to China's strict zero-Covid policy, and in an effort to combat the surging fifth wave -- predicted to peak in the next three weeks -- the city's leader, Carrie Lam, on Tuesday announced its toughest restrictions yet.
All Hong Kong residents -- about 7.4 million people -- will have to undergo three rounds of compulsory Covid-19 testing in March, Lam said during a news conference. In between those tests, residents will have to take daily rapid antigen tests, Lam added.
Public and international schools -- which are already conducting online classes -- will break early for the summer to free their premises for use as temporary isolation, testing and vaccination facilities. An existing ban on in-person dining past 6 p.m., the closure of gyms and entertainment venues, and flight bans from nine countries, will be extended until at least April 20.
In a bid to keep Hong Kong strictly in line with its zero-Covid strategy, China announced last week that it will send health experts and medical supplies to Hong Kong and help build new quarantine and isolation facilities.
"With central government's support and the Hong Kong people's unity, we will certainly triumph over this pandemic. After the storm we will see a rainbow again," Lam said Tuesday.
But even Beijing's help might not be enough.
Modeling by experts at the University of Hong Kong (HKU) predicts the number of confirmed cases to peak at around 183,000 a day in early to mid-March.
Dr. Edwin Tsui, the controller of the Centre for Health Protection, said mass testing is likely to confirm a large number of positive cases the city would then have to manage.
He said the city's health system may need to "handle thousands or tens of thousands of cases...in a very short period of time."
Laura and Nick are not the first Hong Kong parents to be separated from their children. During an outbreak last year, reports emerged of children being sent to hospital, even if they were asymptomatic.
Ava's worried parents took her to hospital on Monday after she came down with a fever and had difficulty breathing. When Ava's Covid test came back positive, her parents were told to leave, Laura said.
The family's story was posted on a popular Facebook group and has since spread, prompting panicked discussions between Hong Kong parents about what could happen if their children test positive and they test negative, like Laura and Nick.
CNN reached out to Lam's office about the family's case but has not received a response. When asked about separating children from their parents in April last year, Lam reiterated that Hong Kong was a "compassionate government."
"We have been applying this exceptional treatment...instead of sending the very young kids on their own to a quarantine center...we will exceptionally accept the admission of the children into the hospital as well," Lam said.
But as cases soar and Hong Kong insists on sending most positive cases to hospital or government-run quarantine facilities, officials' stance on family separation seems less clear.
According to Odile Thiang, a clinical adviser for mental health NGO Mind HK, family separation "is incredibly taxing for both the parents and the child."
"In both cases, there's experiences of anxiety, depression, and of course, PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder)," Thiang said. "And these impacts are felt long after the actual traumatic event." — CNN


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