HONG KONG: People queue up at a mobile specimen collection station for Covid-19 tests on Monday.—AFP
HONG KONG: People queue up at a mobile specimen collection station for Covid-19 tests on Monday.—AFP

HONG KONG: The residents of Hong Kong crowded supermarkets and fresh food markets on Monday to stock up on vegetables, noodles and other necessities after a record number of Covid-19 infections in the city and transport disruptions at the border with mainland China.

The city of 7.5 million people reported a record 614 coronavirus cases on Monday, in the biggest test yet for the Chinese territory’s zero-Covid strategy.

Hong Kong imports 90 per cent of its food supplies, with the mainland its most important source, especially for fresh food. Consumers have already seen a shortage of some foreign imported goods, including premium seafood, due to stringent flight restrictions.

The government tried to assuage worries of a shortage of food from the mainland after some cross-border truck drivers tested positive for the coronavirus.

Several drivers have been forced to isolate but overall fresh food supplies remained stable, despite a drop in supply of vegetables to certain markets, it said on Sunday.

At a fresh food market in Tin Shui Wai, in the city’s northern New Territories, vendors said there would be no vegetables in coming days, prompting customers to buy up produce. “Of course you have to buy. There will be no vegetables from tomorrow. The trucks can’t come here...so the vegetables are very, very pricey,” said a 50-year-old woman surnamed Chow.

John Chan, a vegetable vendor, said the disruptions had seen supply drop by 30pc, including for products such as Chinese flowering cabbage. He cautioned that hundreds of kilograms of vegetables due to arrive on Tuesday may not be able to arrive.

“I still don’t know if they can cross the border. If there is none, the prices will further increase or we have nothing to sell.” Shelves stocking vegetables, tissues and cup noodles were bare at several supermarkets across the former British colony with customers stocking up over concerns that products would be even harder to get in the coming days.

Chow Lai Sheng, a 60-year old janitor, said she bought four toilet rolls as well as instant noodles and canned food. “The Covid situation is severe. And there are no veggies, so I stockpile a bit,” she said.

Published in Dawn, February 8th, 2022

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