Hong Kong bans eating at annual food expo

The country has been strictly adhering to China's zero-COVID policy

By AFP
August 02, 2022
People stand up in a queue outside a COVID-19 testing center in Hong Kong. — AFP/File

HONG KONG: Visitors to Hong Kong's annual exhibition of global gourmet food will once again not be allowed to sample the delicacies due to coronavirus curbs, the organiser said Tuesday.

Tens of thousands of visitors and hundreds of exhibitors are expected at the five-day Food Expo starting next Thursday in the city's Convention and Exhibition Centre.

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But for the second year in a row, there will not be any tasting areas and all attendees must keep their masks on due to public health restrictions, according to Sophia Chong, acting CEO of the expo organiser, the Trade Development Council.

"We understand that visitors would like to taste the samples," Chong said.

"We hope we can resume this arrangement after the pandemic, when it's safe and hygienic to do it."

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The decision was announced a day after the government said fans at November's Hong Kong Sevens will be allowed to drink but not eat in the stands, with masks having to be worn between sips.

Chong said they were not concerned by the measures' impacts on the exhibition as it would be the second year of the tasting ban.

"The number of exhibitors participating in this year's Food Expo actually exceeded that of last year," Chong said.

A new round of HK$2,000 ($255) consumption vouchers will be distributed to most of the 7.5 million Hong Kong residents from Sunday, which is expected by the expo organiser to boost visitors' appetites for shopping.

Hong Kong has been strictly adhering to China's zero-COVID policy, enforcing some of the world's most severe restrictions for more than two years, including mandatory quarantine for overseas arrivals and a ban on group gatherings of more than four people in public places.

In recent weeks, the city has been recording 3-4,000 daily infections, prompting fears of a resurgence after more than 1.2 million residents fell sick and 9,300 died in the first four months of this year.

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