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Life.Culture.Discovery.

Opinion | An expat who fled the coronavirus in Hong Kong for Britain regrets his decision

  • Because of Hong Kong’s proximity to ground zero, he thought he stood a better chance of sidestepping the pandemic overseas
  • But as the death toll climbs daily in the UK and the US, he discovered that he came to the wrong conclusion

Reading Time:2 minutes
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It’s no coincidence that two countries with no living memory of pandemics, Britain and the United States, are suffering more from Covid-19 than anywhere else in the world. Illustration: Mario Riviera

Well done, you lot. Your bars are open again and serving their HK$75 pints and HK$200 cocktails. Your favourite restaurants are digging their overpriced specials out of the freezer. Your gyms are reinstating their exorbitant monthly direct debits, your cinemas are screening the usual Hollywood tosh, and your schools are almost ready to take your terminally bored offspring off your hands.

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You have every right to feel more than just a little self-satisfied as you enjoy your new-found freedoms, bask in the early summer sunshine, and idly ponder where to stop for sunset mojitos on your next Friday night out.

Excuse me if I don’t share in your Liberation Day sentiment. You see, I’m one of those fair-weather expats who scarpered three months ago as the virus closed in, reasoning that the further away I got from a densely populated city on the edge of the country where the pandemic began, the less chance I’d have of being put into a prolonged lockdown.

And didn’t that work out well? Hong Kong has had four deaths while here in Britain we’ve had more than 30,000. Hong Kong people have sensibly and calmly seen off the worst of the coronavirus while the British death toll is climbing and its government still can’t even decide whether to take the temperatures of incoming passengers at airports.

While Hong Kong people go back to work and start planning exotic holidays around the region, people in Britain are too terrified to set foot outside their houses, let alone the country, and face the prospect of being shut out as pariahs by nations that have handled things better.

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In fairness, Hong Kong’s relative success is less a triumph of leadership than a victory of common sense by its people. Carrie Lam dithered and left borders open for far too long but the instinctive caution and practicality of a population acquainted with viral outbreaks, face masks and hand sanitisers cancelled out her perilous procrastination.

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