Editorial | More clarity needed on Hong Kong pilots and aircrew
- It is still not entirely clear whether they can go out and about or are confined to their rooms because of Covid-19 when they fly between locations
![Two Cathay Pacific cargo pilots, including one with a teacher-wife and two children at Discovery Bay International School, returned from Frankfurt testing positive for a strain of the Delta variant. Photo: K.Y. Cheng](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/methode/2021/11/16/f995a560-462c-11ec-88c2-0bacf4eabd5b_image_hires_124658.jpg?itok=bZb8VFPI&v=1637038029)
There are no safe loopholes in a Covid-19 zero-tolerance policy. Evidence of this is to be found in hundreds of people being sent into quarantine at Penny’s Bay, a school closure and mass testing.
This was after two Cathay Pacific cargo pilots, including one with a teacher-wife and two children at Discovery Bay International School, returned from Frankfurt testing positive for a strain of the Delta variant. The incident should prompt sympathy for everyone involved. But it also warrants some serious soul-searching.
The pilots apparently mingled with a local community experiencing a fourth wave of contagion and rising case numbers. This has sparked calls for tightening or withdrawal of quarantine exemptions for aircrew.
Cathay faces a dilemma amid the disruption of global supply chains by the pandemic. On the one hand, there are concerns that such a potential loophole could jeopardise the city’s efforts to match the mainland’s zero-tolerance policy in order to achieve a border reopening.
![While Hong Kong’s government has allowed airlines to regulate themselves, every loophole has to be closed if the city is to remain free of local infections. Photo: May Tse While Hong Kong’s government has allowed airlines to regulate themselves, every loophole has to be closed if the city is to remain free of local infections. Photo: May Tse](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/methode/2021/11/16/fc46a372-462c-11ec-88c2-0bacf4eabd5b_1320x770_124658.jpg)
On the other, Cathay warned that tightening measures would further disrupt the supply chain. A spokesman said: “It is important to maintain the flow of cargo between Hong Kong and the rest of the world.”
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