New Measure Not Meant To Divide Society: Sophia Chan

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2021-06-01 HKT 11:26

Share this story

facebook

  • Health Secretary Sophia Chan says it's wrong to think that the government is punishing people who aren't vaccinated. File photo: RTHK

    Health Secretary Sophia Chan says it's wrong to think that the government is punishing people who aren't vaccinated. File photo: RTHK

Health Secretary Sophia Chan on Tuesday defended the government's plan to deny unvaccinated people from entering venues like restaurants and schools if a fifth wave of Covid-19 infections hit Hong Kong, saying the measure is not meant to divide society.

She told a radio programme that getting inoculated is a free choice and conceded that some people are simply not medically fit to receive a jab.

However, Chan said barring those who haven't been vaccinated from certain venues isn't a punishment.

"I have noticed that some people may have that impression. But don't be mistaken," the health chief argued, saying it's a public health practice to adjust epidemic-control measures based on vaccine take-ups.

She said people were annoyed that businesses were ordered to close during previous outbreaks, and authorities hope they wouldn't have to do that again.

However, a caller to an RTHK programme said the government appears to be treating those who haven't been inoculated as "aliens".

"This is so irrational," said a woman who gave her surname as Leung. She said she suffers from white coat syndrome and is worried that receiving a jab might trigger some "hidden illnesses."

"The government failed to consider this group of people. Are they denying our human rights ... barring us from entering schools and restaurants and treating us like an alien?" she questioned.

Meanwhile, infectious disease expert Joseph Tsang said although Hong Kong has had more than 28 days of zero local infections, it doesn't mean the city is safe.

He pointed to a policeman who tested preliminary positive for the coronavirus on Monday, saying that shows that there might still be silent transmission in the community.

Tsang said current anti-epidemic measures alone aren’t enough to prevent future outbreaks and it's key to build up herd immunity.

Separately, the minister in charge of the city’s vaccination programme, Patrick Nip, told RTHK that about 37,000 thousand people made a booking for a jab on Monday.

The civil service chief said the figure was a new high and he hopes the trend could continue.

RECENT NEWS

HSBC Fined HK$4.2M Over Disclosure Breaches In Research Reports

The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) has reprimanded and imposed a fine of HK$4.2 million on HSBC for breaching ... Read more

Philippines: The Hidden Fintech Gem You Cant Afford To Miss | Lito Villanueva

The Philippines is the fastest-growing digital economy and home to one of Southeast Asia’s most valuable fintech unic... Read more

SBI And Chainlink Partner On Blockchain And Digital Asset Use

SBI Group, one of Japan’s largest financial conglomerates with assets exceeding the equivalent of US$200 billion, has... Read more

China Considers Yuan-Backed Stablecoins To Advance Global Currency Push

China is considering permitting the use of yuan-backed stablecoins for the first time in a move that could support wide... Read more

Financial Sanctions: LSEG Risk Intelligence Answers Your Key Questions

Financial sanctions are essential government tools for achieving foreign policy objectives – and compliance is mandat... Read more

Korea Development Bank Leads $45M Bridge Round For Upstage

South Korea’s Upstage has secured a US$45 million Series B bridge round supported by Korea Development Bank (KDB), Am... Read more