SARS turned Hong Kong into a masked city, but with new infections dropping sharply and warmer weather making them a stuffy proposition, many people are wondering if it's time to take them off.
Business leaders worry the masks are further tarnishing Hong Kong's image, which has been hard hit by SARS.
"You can't see our smile when we put the masks on," said James Lu, executive director of the Hong Kong Hotels Association, whose members have seen business collapse amid the SARS outbreak. "As soon as SARS is over, we'd like to have burn-the-masks day," he said.
Health officials say there is no reason for Hong Kong people to wear surgical masks as they go about their daily routines, but hundreds of thousands have been doing so since the SARS outbreak in March.
SARS has infected 1,674 people here and killed 212, but the number of new daily infections has dropped into the single digits over the past week.
Meanwhile, warmer weather in subtropical Hong Kong has made the masks more uncomfortable in recent days, and fewer people seem to be wearing them.
There were far more visible faces than masked ones yesterday in Hong Kong Park, but people riding buses were mostly masked.
But many say the masks make them feel safer, or at least psychologically better.
"My head gets very hot when I wear a mask," said 35-year-old waitress Angel Mok, who's worn one for almost two months. "But I think it's safer to put it on until the day when we have zero infections."
Others say the masks should go.
"We should stop wearing them -- the numbers of people getting sick have been low," said Chan Tat-yuen, whose employers at the Ying Kee Tea Co are required to wear masks on the job.
SARS fears closed down Hong Kong's public schools for weeks, and those that have reopened require students and teachers to wear masks. Officials also require daily temperature checks of everybody in the schools.
Math instructor Leung Yiu-chung said that if nobody in the classroom is sick, there's no point in the masks. They make life uncomfortable for teachers who have to talk for hours, and many students have been drifting off to sleep behind their stuffy masks.
Hong Kong's Health Department says people with respiratory symptoms should wear masks to prevent spreading germs, and health care workers must wear masks and take other stringent precautions against SARS.
Masks can help stop the disease from spreading through droplets from sneezing and coughing, experts say.
But global health officials say there's no real need for people to put on masks everywhere they go. Some used masks turn up as litter on city streets and on Hong Kong's rural mountain trails and beaches.
"People on the street are not contracting it simply by walking by somebody who has the disease," said Dick Thompson, a spokesman for the Geneva-based World Health Organization, which put out the global alert on SARS.
Washing hands is a more important precaution, Thompson said, adding that he would not put on a mask to walk through congested Hong Kong streets.
But if it makes people feel better, they should go ahead and wear them, Thompson said.
‘THEY KILLED HOPE’: Four presidential candidates were killed in the 1980s and 1990s, and Miguel Uribe’s mother died during a police raid to free her from Pablo Escobar Colombian presidential candidate Miguel Uribe has died two months after being shot at a campaign rally, his family said on Monday, as the attack rekindled fears of a return to the nation’s violent past. The 39-year-old conservative senator, a grandson of former Colombian president Julio Cesar Turbay (1978-1982), was shot in the head and leg on June 7 at a rally in the capital, Bogota, by a suspected 15-year-old hitman. Despite signs of progress in the past few weeks, his doctors on Saturday announced he had a new brain hemorrhage. “To break up a family is the most horrific act of violence that
HISTORIC: After the arrest of Kim Keon-hee on financial and political funding charges, the country has for the first time a former president and former first lady behind bars South Korean prosecutors yesterday raided the headquarters of the former party of jailed former South Korean president Yoon Suk-yeol to gather evidence in an election meddling case against his wife, a day after she was arrested on corruption and other charges. Former first lady Kim Keon-hee was arrested late on Tuesday on a range of charges including stock manipulation and corruption, prosecutors said. Her arrest came hours after the Seoul Central District Court reviewed prosecutors’ request for an arrest warrant against the 52-year-old. The court granted the warrant, citing the risk of tampering with evidence, after prosecutors submitted an 848-page opinion laying out
North Korean troops have started removing propaganda loudspeakers used to blare unsettling noises along the border, South Korea’s military said on Saturday, days after Seoul’s new administration dismantled ones on its side of the frontier. The two countries had already halted propaganda broadcasts along the demilitarized zone, Seoul’s military said in June after the election of South Korean President Lee Jae-myung, who is seeking to ease tensions with Pyongyang. The South Korean Ministry of National Defense on Monday last week said it had begun removing loudspeakers from its side of the border as “a practical measure aimed at helping ease
CONFLICT: The move is the latest escalation of the White House’s pitched battle with Harvard University as more than US$2 billion is suspended US President Donald Trump’s administration threatened to assume ownership of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of patents from Harvard University, accusing the Ivy League college of failing to comply with the law on federal research grants. In a letter to Harvard president Alan Garber on Friday, US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said the university is failing its obligations to US taxpayers, paving the way for a process that could result in the government seizing its patents under the Bayh-Dole Act. Harvard has until Sept. 5 to prove it is complying with the requirements, including whether it showed a