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China to fully resume travel with Hong Kong, Macao on Feb 6

Pre-departure COVID-19 tests will no longer be required. 

China to fully resume travel with Hong Kong, Macao on Feb 6

Passengers arrive at West Kowloon High-Speed Train Station Terminus on the first day of the resumption of rail service to mainland China. (Photo: Reuters/Tyrone Siu)

HONG KONG: China said on Friday (Feb 3) that cross-border travel between the mainland, Hong Kong and Macao would fully resume from Feb 6, dropping existing quotas and scrapping a mandatory COVID-19 test that was required before travelling.

Group tours between China and its two special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macao would resume, while the number of customs checkpoints open will return to pre-pandemic levels, China's Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office said in a statement on its website.

Even after China reopened its borders to the world on Jan 8, a quota system and COVID-19 testing requirement remained for travellers between the mainland and Hong Kong.

The three border checkpoints that have not yet reopened will do so from Feb 6, Hong Kong's leader John Lee said at a press conference on Friday.

Hong Kong will also scrap a COVID-19 vaccination requirement to enter Hong Kong for all arrivals, including non-Hong Kong residents, Lee added.

Searches on Chinese travel website Qunar for round-trip air tickets to and from Hong Kong and the mainland increased seven-fold on Friday after China's announcement, data from state media China Transportation News showed.

China's announcement came a day after Hong Kong launched a promotion campaign including 500,000 free flights to lure back visitors, businesses and investors back to the financial hub after more than three years of tough COVID-19 curbs.

The "Hello Hong Kong" campaign would show the city was open for tourism and was aimed at boosting business and investment in the Chinese special administrative region, said Lee. 

Hong Kong was largely sealed off behind closed borders for much of the past three years in a bid to ward off COVID-19, with mandatory quarantine of up to three weeks for people arriving as well as intensive testing and screening.

The former British colony closely followed China's zero-COVID policy until the middle of 2022 when it began to gradually unwind its rules.

Hong Kong dropped most of its remaining COVID-19 rules in December, but mask-wearing remains mandatory unless exercising, and students must take daily rapid antigen tests.

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Source: Agencies/zl

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