In this Aug 28, 2020 picture, pedestrians walk past a stadium in Hong Kong which will be used as a COVID-19 testing facility during the city's universal virus testing program starting on Sept 1. (ISAAC LAWRENCE / AFP)
HONG KONG – Officials of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government have called on residents again to actively participate in the upcoming universal community testing for COVID-19, expressing their hope that the scheme will help the city return normal at an early date.
The more people participate in the testing, the faster will Hong Kong contain the epidemic, Chief Secretary for Administration Matthew Cheung said Sunday in an online article.
Cheung said the testing program is aimed at screening asymptomatic patients and cutting the transmission chains of the virus as soon as possible.
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The massive testing due to start on Tuesday will be launched for free and on a voluntary basis, and the government has reiterated the personal data of participants will be well protected. As far, more than 400,000 residents have registered for the testing.
The SAR government has reiterated that personal data of participants will be well protected
Financial Secretary of the HKSAR government Paul Chan also appealed to businesses and commerce chambers to encourage their employees to take the coronavirus tests in his online blog on Sunday.
Only after the invisible transmission chains are stopped, the SAR government will be able to focus on reviving the economy and helping improve people's incomes, as well as resuming normal travels of Hong Kong residents to the mainland and Macao, Chan said.
In the face of the COVID-19 challenges, economic stimulus and relief measures of the HKSAR government has boosted the deficit by nearly HK$290 billion (US$37.41 billion) and the fiscal reserves have dropped to about HK$800 billion.
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Chan said the deficit increase is unsustainable and the SAR government has to save energy for economic and financial uncertainties ahead, as well as possible another round of epidemic outbreak in the future.
Hong Kong's Center for Health Protection reported 15 new cases on Sunday, bringing the total confirmed cases to 4,801. As far, COVID-19 has caused 88 deaths in Hong Kong, and 351 patients are still hospitalized.