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Hong Kong leader says scope to further delay chief executive election – Metro US

Hong Kong leader says scope to further delay chief executive election

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks during a news
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks during a news conference, in Hong Kong

HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said on Wednesday that there were no plans to further tighten COVID-19 rules as the city battles to contain an escalating outbreak but said a chief executive election, set for May, had scope to be further delayed.

Lam told a daily press briefing that “legally speaking” there was room to further delay the election for the global financial hub’s next leader.

“A further delay cannot be decided by the Hong Kong special administrative region itself, it depends on how the central government sees it,” she added.

The election was originally scheduled to be held on March 27 but was postponed to May 8 as a wave of the highly transmissible Omicron variant erupted in the Chinese-ruled city in February.

Lam, who has not yet confirmed whether she would seek another term, has seen her administration come under pressure from for Hong Kong’s handling of the virus.

Chinese netizens have also expressed anger and frustration in recent days at Hong Kong residents flocking to beaches and shopping malls while they faced lockdowns in their own cities.

Some said Hong Kong had failed to control its outbreak and blamed the city for the latest surge of infections on the mainland.

Health authorities reported 29,272 new infections on Wednesday and 217 deaths.

Hong Kong has reported about 790,000 COVID-19 infections and close to 5,000 deaths, most of them in the past three weeks.

The former British colony has followed mainland China’s “dynamic zero” policy which seeks to curb all outbreaks as soon as they occur, instead of trying to live with the virus.

But deaths have spiked, particularly amongst its mostly unvaccinated elderly, with the city registering the most deaths per million people globally in the week to March 14, according to the Our World in Data publication.

Several local media outlets reported that the government would close beaches from Thursday to prevent large gatherings.

Lam said that as public beaches were already meant to be closed, authorities would just “strengthen management”, for instance by sealing them off.

The city’s Leisure and Cultural Services Department said it had immediately suspended lifesaving services and would strengthen the enclosure of each beach it managed, to “prevent the public from entering”, according to a statement on Wednesday.

The city is already facing its most draconian measures since the pandemic started in 2020. Gatherings of more than two people are banned, most venues are shut – including schools – and masks are compulsory everywhere, even when exercising outdoors.

Hong Kong’s borders have been effectively sealed for two years with few flights able to land and most transit passengers banned.

(Reporting by Farah Master, Jessie Pang, Twinnie Siu, Marius Zaharia and Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Raju Gopalakrishnan)